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.
CITATION STYLE
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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