Publication details

Remarkably high blue ring occurrence in Estonian Scots pines in 1976 reveals wood anatomical evidence of extreme autumnal cooling

Authors

GREAVES Ciara CRIVELLARO Alan PIERMATTEI Alma KRUSIC Paul J. OPPENHEIMER Clive POTAPOV Aleksei HORDO Maris METSLAID Sandra KASK Regino KANGUR Ahto BÜNTGEN Ulf

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Trees
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://doi.org/10.1007/s00468-022-02366-1
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00468-022-02366-1
Keywords Climate change; Dendrochronology; Europe; Lignification; Pinus sylvestris; Temperature reconstruction; Wood anatomy
Description ‘Blue rings’ (BRs) are visual indicators of less lignified cell walls typically formed towards the end of a tree’s growing season. Though BRs have been associated with ephemeral surface cooling, often following large volcanic eruptions, the intensity of cold spells necessary to produce BRs, as well as the consistency of their formation within and between trees still remains uncertain. Here, we report an exceptionally high BR occurrence within and between Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) trees at two sites in Estonia, including the first published whole-stem analysis for BRs. Daily meteorological measurements from a nearby station allowed us to investigate the role temperature has played in BR formation since the beginning of the twentieth century. The single year in which BRs were consistently formed within and amongst most trees was 1976. While the summer of 1976 is well known for an exceptional heatwave in Northwest Europe, mean September and October temperatures were remarkably low over Eastern Europe, and 3.8 °C below the 1961–1990 mean at our sites. Our findings contribute to a better eco-physiological interpretation of BRs, and further demonstrate their ability to reveal ephemeral cooling not captured by dendrochronological ring width and latewood density measurements.

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