Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Management and Production of Renewable Resources, Yliopistokatu 6, FI-80100 Joensuu, Finland.
Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Management and Production of Renewable Resources, Eteläranta 55, FI-96300 Rovaniemi, Finland.
Tree Physiol. 2018 Apr 1;38(4):602-616. doi: 10.1093/treephys/tpx111.
Future climate scenarios predict increased air temperatures and precipitation, particularly at high latitudes, and especially so during winter. Soil temperatures, however, are more difficult to predict, since they depend strongly on the fate of the insulating snow cover. 'Rain-on-snow' events and warm spells during winter can lead to thaw-freeze cycles, compacted snow and ice encasement, as well as local flooding. These adverse conditions could counteract the otherwise positive effects of climatic changes on forest seedling growth. In order to study the effects of different winter and snow conditions on young Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) seedlings, we conducted a laboratory experiment in which 80 1-year-old Scots pine seedlings were distributed between four winter treatments in dasotrons: ambient snow cover (SNOW), compressed snow and ice encasement (ICE), flooded and frozen soil (FLOOD) and no snow (NO SNOW). During the winter treatment period and a 1.5-month simulated spring/early summer phase, we monitored the needle, stem and root biomass of the seedlings, and determined their starch and soluble sugar concentrations. In addition, we assessed the stress experienced by the seedlings by measuring chlorophyll fluorescence, electric impedance and photosynthesis of the previous-year needles. Compared with the SNOW treatment, carbohydrate concentrations were lower in the FLOOD and NO SNOW treatments where the seedlings had almost died before the end of the experiment, presumably due to frost desiccation of aboveground parts during the winter treatments. The seedlings of the ICE treatment showed dead needles and stems only above the snow and ice cover. The results emphasize the importance of an insulating and protecting snow cover for small forest tree seedlings, and that future winters with changed snow patterns might affect the survival of tree seedlings and thus forest productivity.
未来的气候情景预测,空气温度和降水,特别是在高纬度地区,尤其是在冬季会增加。然而,土壤温度更难预测,因为它们强烈依赖于绝缘雪盖的命运。冬季的“雨夹雪”事件和暖期会导致解冻-冻结循环、压实的雪和冰包封以及局部洪水。这些不利条件可能会抵消气候变化对森林幼苗生长的积极影响。为了研究不同冬季和雪况对一年生苏格兰松(Pinus sylvestris L.)幼苗的影响,我们在实验室实验中进行了一项研究,其中将 80 株 1 岁的苏格兰松幼苗分配到 dasotrons 中的四个冬季处理中:环境雪盖(SNOW)、压缩的雪和冰包封(ICE)、水淹和冻结土壤(FLOOD)和无雪(NO SNOW)。在冬季处理期间和模拟春季/初夏的 1.5 个月期间,我们监测了幼苗的针叶、茎和根生物量,并确定了它们的淀粉和可溶性糖浓度。此外,我们通过测量前一年针叶的叶绿素荧光、电阻抗和光合作用来评估幼苗所经历的胁迫。与 SNOW 处理相比,在 FLOOD 和 NO SNOW 处理中,碳水化合物浓度较低,幼苗在实验结束前几乎死亡,这可能是由于冬季处理期间地上部分的霜干旱所致。ICE 处理的幼苗仅在雪和冰盖上方表现出针叶和茎死亡。研究结果强调了绝缘和保护雪盖对小森林树木幼苗的重要性,以及未来具有变化雪模式的冬季可能会影响幼苗的存活,从而影响森林生产力。