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Journal ArticleDOI

Growth of Spruce at Dubawnt Lake, Northwest Territories

01 Jan 1972-Arctic-Vol. 25, Iss: 1, pp 59
TL;DR: In this article, Hansell et al. pointed out that the concept of "tree line" is confusing since a lone tree far beyond the forest border must be included within the "treed" zone, and that an extension of range of "trees" over a few miles, thus, does not in itself, to me at least, constitute indisputable evidence of a general change in the tree line.
Abstract: The interesting note by Hansell et al. on tree growth at Dubawnt Lake and on my statements concerning trees at Dubawnt, Ennadai, and Yathkyed Lakes requires comment. Let me briefly state a few points: 1) The concept "tree line" is confusing since a lone tree far beyond the forest border must be included within the "treed" zone; 2) Dwarfed and decumbent black spruce (occasionally white or "intermediate" forms) exist over a wide zone north of the forest border in Keewatin and Eastern Mackenzie; individuals in favoured sites attain "tree" size (>=3 inches in diameter breast height, dbh); 3) While reproduction is primarily by layering (in black spruce at least), seedlings are consistently seen ...; 4) Seedling mortality in all species in these areas is high, but species survival is most markedly conditioned by the frequency with which very severe seasons occur (i.e., a series of very cold summers); 5) Seedlings that survive a series of favourable years can then live and grow through a fairly long series of rather severe years; 6) At Ennadai and elsewhere, apparently anomalously successful young trees are in places found on exposed sites; they are not, however, a sure sign of a major climatic amelioration but of a few favourable years; 7) An extension of range of "trees" over a few miles, thus, does not in itself, to me at least, constitute indisputable evidence of an extension of the "tree line" especially if this has occurred within the existing range of spruce as a species; 8) The map as presented ... shows, in my view, the northward extent of the range of spruce, anywhere within which will be found the occasional "tree" on favoured sites, the result of some sequence of events permitting the individual to grow but not necessarily a general change in climatic conditions; 9) A much better indication of climatic change would be a shift in the position of the forest border, defined as the area where the (gently rolling) terrain is 50 per cent covered by forest and 50 per cent by tundra ...; 10) The comment that I say spruce has not re-established at Ennadai Lake is very misleading since I wrote that spruce is common at Ennadai Lake (part of which lies south of the forest border); my reference was to a grove of spruce (at the northern largely barren end of the lake) cut by natives many years ago which has not regenerated; 11) There is, in fact, a grove of spruce with individuals of dbh >=3 inches and basal diameter of >=8 inches near Yathkyed Lake (at 62°35'N, 98°52'W) which would put the "tree line" far out into the barrens on the map as presented; 12) There is also a grove of spruce near the outlet of the Kamilukuak River (south end of Dubawnt at 62°41'N, 101°33'W) larger and with larger individuals, if memory serves, than any mentioned in the literature. These points are not to be interpreted as disbelief in climatic change. I agree, in general, with the summary Hansell et al. present of recent climatic events. The topic invites speculation and, above all, more comprehensive field data from many places.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reconstitue les deplacements de la limite des forets in the course of l'Holocene, dans la region de la riviere aux Feuilles, Nouveau-Quebec (ca 58°15' N, 72° O).
Abstract: A l’aide de macrofossiles ligneux recoltes dans les fens, situes de part et d’autre de la limite moderne des forets, nous avons reconstitue les deplacements de la limite des forets au cours de l’Holocene, dans la region de la riviere aux Feuilles, Nouveau-Quebec (ca 58°15' N, 72° O). Cette reconstitution des fluctuations de la limite des forets est basee sur une recolte exhaustive de plus de 700 macrofossiles ligneux, dont 67 specimens ont ete dates par la methode du 14C. Les melezes etaient presents dans la region il y a 4500 ans BP. Depuis cette date, les melezes ont transgresse au moins a deux reprises la limite moderne des forets, soit entre 3500 et 2700 ans BP, ou s’est faite l’expansion maximale de la limite des forets vers le nord, et entre 2000 et 1600 ans BP, ou une seconde remontee, de moins grande ampleur, a ete notee. Tres peu de macrofossiles datant des periodes de 2700-2400, 2100-2000, 1600-1300 ans BP ont ete recoltes, ce qui suggere une regression des populations arborescentes durant ces periodes. Apres 1300 ans BP, aucun deplacement de la limite des forets vers le nord n’a ete enregistre, bien qu'une expansion locale des populations de melezes se soit fait entre 1000 et 600 ans BP, ainsi qu’une regression entre 550 et 250 ans BP. Malgre une recherche intensive, aucun macrofossile de meleze n'a ete recolte a plus de 5 km au nord de la limite moderne des forets.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of factors affecting seed germination, seedling establishment and growth to reproductive maturity in Eucalyptus pauciflora Sieb.
Abstract: Factors affecting seed germination, seedling establishment and growth to reproductive maturity in Eucalyptus pauciflora Sieb. ex Spreng. at the tree line in southeastern Australia were investigated. Timing of germination was determined principally by temperature but could be strongly modified by soil water. Mortality of germinants was heaviest during the first growing season (dependent on soil water) and the first winter (dependent on the depth and duration of snow cover). Neither plant nor soil treatments with insecticide or fungicide had an overriding or consistent effect on germination or seedling establishment. The probability of reaching the sapling stage was greater for planted seedlings than for plants germinated on site, indicating the dependence of survival on accumulated reserves. There was no clear indication of a general decrease in survival with increasing altitude, because of an interplay between elevation and site factors including competing vegetation, snow depth and period of snow cover. Five-year-old saplings planted up to 200 m above the tree line produced reproductive structures and viable seed between the ages of 13 and 18 years. The relevance of the results to an understanding of the location of the present tree line is discussed.

39 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1993
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the difficulties of delineating treeline, including the indefiniteness of the concept of treeline and its highly variable nature both physiognomically and taxonomically, and the sparseness of representative climatological records.
Abstract: Treeline is a very traditional, still fascinating, phytogeographical complex of problems. One of the problems is the climatic characterization of treeline. Proposals have appeared in the scientific literature for more than a hundred years concerning the climatic indicators that best denote the location of treeline. Often, however, insufficient emphasis is placed on the difficulties of delineating treeline. Difficulties include the indefiniteness of the concept of treeline, its highly variable nature both physiognomically and taxonomically, and the sparseness of representative climatological records from treeline environments. Some authors stress the diversity of treeline; others consider it to be almost ecologically equivalent world wide.

31 citations