Long-Term effects of climate and land-use change on larch budmoth outbreaks in the French Alps

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Abstract

The intensity of cyclic larch budmoth (Zeiraphera diniana Guenée; LBM) outbreaks across the European Alps has been reported to have weakened since the early 1980s. In addition to a warmer climate, changes in land-use cover over modern and historical times may have affected the LBM system. Here, we present tree-ring-based reconstructions of LBM outbreaks from a mixed subalpine larch?pine forest in the French Alps for the period 1700?2010. Temporal variation in LBM outbreak severity was mainly driven by land-use changes, including varying forest structure and species composition. Human population pressure and associated resource demands for fuel wood and construction timber not only resulted in a reduction of larch and subsequent suppression of pine, but also supported an overall grassland expansion for livestock. Superimposed on modern land abandonment and pine re-colonization is a strong warming trend, which may also contribute to the observed late 20th-century weakening of Alpine-wide cyclic LBM outbreaks. Our results suggest that a complex interplay of different factors triggered less synchronized LBM outbreaks at broader scales, with overall significantly lower intensities at local scales.

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Battipaglia, G., Büntgen, U., McCloskey, S. P. J., Blarquez, O., Denis, N., Paradis, L., … Carcaillet, C. (2014). Long-Term effects of climate and land-use change on larch budmoth outbreaks in the French Alps. Climate Research, 62(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.3354/cr01251

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