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Hydroclimatic drivers of the growth of riparian cottonwoods at the prairie margin: River flows, river regulation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation

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Abstract Cottonwoods, riparian poplars, are facultative phreatophytes and can obtain water from shallow soil moisture originating from rainfall, or from the deeper capillary fringe above the alluvial water table that… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Cottonwoods, riparian poplars, are facultative phreatophytes and can obtain water from shallow soil moisture originating from rainfall, or from the deeper capillary fringe above the alluvial water table that is recharged by river water infiltration. The correspondence between cottonwood growth and river flows should reveal the dependency upon alluvial groundwater and subsequently, the vulnerability to reduced river flows. To explore this association, we analyzed historic growth patterns of plains cottonwoods (Populus deltoides) along the Red Deer River (RDR), which is at the northwestern limit of the North American Great Plains. We developed chronologies of yearly radial increments (RI) and basal area increments (BAI) and explored correspondences with the environmental records from the past century. In this semi-arid region, the RI or BAI were not correlated with local precipitation while negative correlation with growth season temperature (T) (r = −0.37, p

Keywords: river flows; river; hydroclimatic drivers; growth; growth riparian; drivers growth

Journal Title: Dendrochronologia
Year Published: 2018

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