Climate change is expected to influence plant productivity particularly through changes in the timing of budburst. Nonetheless, knowledge about the intraspecific variation of the timing of budburst and its relationship with climate is insufficient for most tree species. Based on the common garden experiments of Fagus crenata, we investigated the interrelationships between the day of budburst, cumulative degree-days (temperature sum), chilling duration, and photoperiod at the timing of budburst for the trees of different combinations of 11 sites of seed origin and seven experimental sites in Japan. We found that the relationship between the latitude of experimental sites and the timing of budburst differed for the trees of different latitudes of origins. The timing of budburst was earlier for the trees of more northern populations throughout the latitudes of experimental sites. Variation in the timing of budburst among the trees of different seed origins was smaller for more northern experimental sites. Such patterns were caused by directional changes in the relationships between temperature sum, chilling duration, and photoperiod among the trees of different origins: the asymptotes of the curvilinear relationship between chilling duration and temperature sum, chilling duration and photoperiod, and temperature sum and photoperiod, decreased for more northern populations. With the northward expansion of species distribution, the responses of budburst to climate probably changed genetically in such ways in this species. Our results suggest that intraspecific variations in the relationships between the timing of budburst and associated meteorological factors inevitably influence the overall pattern of the timing of budburst at the geographic scale, and the timing of budburst might deviate from predictions when intraspecific variations are not considered.
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Heliyon
November 2024
LEPSE, Univ Montpellier, INRAE, Institut Agro, Montpellier, France.
The breeding phenology of birds is often timed to coincide with a peak in food availability. However, the shortening of the vegetation period with increasing elevation may force bird species at high elevations to breed earlier in relation to optimal environmental conditions due to time constraints. We investigated differences in fledging dates in five Alpine woodland songbird species along an elevational gradient from 1500 to 2200 m in Switzerland.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biometeorol
August 2024
USDA California Climate Hub, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
California contains a broad geography over which climate conditions can be suitable for cultivating multiple varieties of winegrapes. However, climate change is projected to make winegrape cultivation more challenging across many of California's winegrowing regions. In order to understand the potential effects of climate change on winegrapes, this study models variety-specific phenology for six winegrape varieties and quantifies the change in phenology and viticulturally-important agroclimate metrics over 12 of California's American Viticultural Areas (AVAs) by the mid-21st century.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
April 2024
Plants and Ecosystems (PLECO), Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Wilrijk, Belgium.
Climatic drivers alone do not adequately explain the regional variation in budburst timing in deciduous forests across Europe. Stand-level factors, such as tree species richness, might affect budburst timing by creating different microclimates under the same site macroclimate. We assessed different phases of the spring phenology (start, midpoint, end, and overall duration of the budburst period) of four important European tree species (Betula pendula, Fagus sylvatica, Quercus robur and Tilia cordata) in monocultures and four-species mixture stands of a common garden tree biodiversity experiment in Belgium (FORBIO) in 2021 and 2022.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
February 2024
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland.
Global warming is affecting the phenological cycles of plants and animals, altering the complex synchronization that has co-evolved over thousands of years between interacting species and trophic levels. Here, we examined how warmer winter conditions affect the timing of budburst in six common European trees and the hatching of a generalist leaf-feeding insect, the spongy moth , whose fitness depends on the synchrony between egg hatch and leaf emergence of the host tree. We applied four different temperature treatments to eggs and twig cuttings, that mimicked warmer winters and reduced chilling temperatures that are necessary for insect diapause and bud dormancy release, using heated open-top chambers (ambient or +3.
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