Forests (Oct 2017)

Wild Apple Growth and Climate Change in Southeast Kazakhstan

  • Irina P. Panyushkina,
  • Nurjan S. Mukhamadiev,
  • Ann M. Lynch,
  • Nursagim A. Ashikbaev,
  • Alexis H. Arizpe,
  • Christopher D. O’Connor,
  • Danyar Abjanbaev,
  • Gulnaz Z. Mengdіbayeva,
  • Abay O. Sagitov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f8110406
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 406

Abstract

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Wild populations of Malus sieversii [Ldb.] M. Roem are valued genetic and watershed resources in Inner Eurasia. These populations are located in a region that has experienced rapid and on-going climatic change over the past several decades. We assess relationships between climate variables and wild apple radial growth with dendroclimatological techniques to understand the potential of a changing climate to influence apple radial growth. Ring-width chronologies spanning 48 to 129 years were developed from 12 plots in the Trans-Ili Alatau and Jungar Alatau ranges of Tian Shan Mountains, southeastern Kazakhstan. Cluster analysis of the plot-level chronologies suggests different temporal patterns of growth variability over the last century in the two mountain ranges studied. Changes in the periodicity of annual ring-width variability occurred ca. 1970 at both mountain ranges, with decadal-scale variability supplanted by quasi-biennial variation. Seascorr correlation analysis of primary and secondary weather variables identified negative growth associations with spring precipitation and positive associations with cooler fall-winter temperatures, but the relative importance of these relationships varied spatially and temporally, with a shift in the relative importance of spring precipitation ca. 1970 at Trans-Ili Alatau. Altered apple tree radial growth patterns correspond to altered climatology in the Lake Balkhash Basin driven by unprecedented intensified Arctic Oscillations after the late 1970s.

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