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A Retrospective Isotopic Study of Spruce Decline in the Vosges Mountains (France)
Authors:Poszwa  Anne  Wickman  Tonie  Dambrine  Etienne  Ferry  Bruno  Dupouey  Jean-Luc  Helle  Gerdhard  Schleser  Gerdhard  Breda  Nathalie
Institution:(1) INRA Nancy, Unité Cycles Biogéochimiques, 54280 Champenoux, France;(2) Land and water resources, Royal Institute of Technology, 10044 Stockholm, Sweden;(3) Laboratoire d'Etude des Ressources Forêt-Bois, ENGREF, 14 rue Girardet, 54042 Nancy Cedex, France;(4) INRA Nancy, Equipe Phytoécologie Forestière, 54280 Champenoux, France;(5) Forschungszentrum Jülich, Institut für Chemie und Dynamik der Geosphäre, Jülich, Postfach 1930, 52425 Jülich, Germany
Abstract:The objective of this study was to assess the time variation of mineral and water stress levels across the life of a declining, Mg-deficient, spruce stand, in order to clarify the factors that caused the decline. Since 1985, strong soil acidification linked to a large leaching of nitrate and base cations was measured at the study site. In 1994, 5 trees were felled and tree rings were measured and analysed for Ca, Mg, K, Sr, 13C12C and 87Sr/86Sr isotopic ratios. Strontium pools and fluxes as well as root Sr isotope ratio in relation to depth were also measured. Wood chemical concentrations and isotope ratios were strongly related to the dominance status of each tree. On average during the study period, the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of spruce wood decreased. Using a mechanistic model computing long term variations of 87Sr/86Sr ratio in trees and soils, we reproduced the observed trend by simulating soil acidification – increasing Sr drainage from the whole profile, and particularly from the organic horizon –, and root uptake becoming more superficial with time. Between 1952 and 1976, tree ring Delta 13C decreased strongly and continuously, which, in addition to other factors, might be related to an increase in water stress. Thus, a decrease in rooting depth, possibly related to soil acidification, appeared as a possible cause for the long term increase in water stress. The extreme drought event of 1976 appears to have revealed and triggered the decline.
Keywords:acidification  C isotope  France  nutrient leaching  rooting rise  spruce decline  Sr isotope modelling  Vosges  water stress
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