Publications by authors named "C Grossiord"

Chronic reductions in soil moisture combined with high air temperatures can modify tree carbon and water relations. However, little is known about how trees acclimate their foliar structure to the individual and combined effects of these two climate drivers. We used open-top chambers to determine the multi-year effects of chronic air warming (+5 °C) and soil moisture reduction (-50%) alone and in combination on the foliar anatomy of two European tree species.

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Article Synopsis
  • Increased nitrogen (N) deposition has boosted tree productivity, but the reasons behind forest sensitivity to N deposition are still unclear.
  • Analysis of data from 62,000 trees across Europe revealed that conifers benefit from N deposition, while broadleaved trees see decreased growth.
  • Factors such as air temperature and precipitation significantly influence tree growth sensitivity to N deposition, highlighting the importance of leaf type and environmental conditions in understanding N's impact on European forests.
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Article Synopsis
  • Increasing tree species diversity in Mediterranean forests might worsen drought effects on trees rather than help, mainly due to how species compete for water.
  • Research in unmanaged forest stands found that mixed species (four types) exhibited lower water potential and higher hydraulic impairment compared to single species stands (one type).
  • The negative effects of mixing species were most pronounced during the driest summer periods, highlighting potential challenges for mixed Mediterranean forests under future climate conditions.
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Increasing tree diversity is considered a key management option to adapt forests to climate change. However, the effect of species diversity on a forest's ability to cope with extreme drought remains elusive. In this study, we assessed drought tolerance (xylem vulnerability to cavitation) and water stress (water potential), and combined them into a metric of drought-mortality risk (hydraulic safety margin) during extreme 2021 or 2022 summer droughts in five European tree diversity experiments encompassing different biomes.

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Heatwaves and soil droughts are increasing in frequency and intensity, leading many tree species to exceed their thermal thresholds, and driving wide-scale forest mortality. Therefore, investigating heat tolerance and canopy temperature regulation mechanisms is essential to understanding and predicting tree vulnerability to hot droughts. We measured the diurnal and seasonal variation in leaf water potential (Ψ), gas exchange (photosynthesis A and stomatal conductance g), canopy temperature (T), and heat tolerance (leaf critical temperature T and thermal safety margins TSM, i.

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