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- Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin
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As one proceeds poleward or as elevation increases, the height of the trees gradually decreases while the spacing between them increases until a point is finally reached where the trees give way to tundra. This is called the tree line.
Arctic tree lines form a ring around the Arctic Ocean and extend southward to Labrador and westward around the Bering Sea from Alaska to Siberia. In oceanic regions Arctic tree lines are characterized by birches, while in the interior Arctic larches and spruce are more common. Firs are present in some Arctic tree lines. Antarctic tree lines are more abrupt, as very little tundra vegetation exists in these areas.
The shape of trees also changes with altitude. Broad-leaved trees are more common at lower altitudes, as at the base of a mountain. These tree forms gradually give way to pines and sometimes birches as the altitude increases. Spruce and fir tend to dominate forests at the highest elevations. Local conditions determine whether Alpine timberlines arise gradually or abruptly as the altitude increases. Abrupt timberlines give way to Alpine meadows and then boulder fields, followed by bare rock with life-forms limited to lichens.
The transition to the treeless condition is more commonly gradual. Initially in a closed, tightly spaced forest (forest line), the spacing between trees widens rapidly as tree height decreases (the kampf zone). This zone gives way to a region of low twisted and stunted trees called the krummholz. Together, the kampf zone and the krummholz constitute the transition zone. The end of the krummholz marks the tree line.
The same woody species may at higher elevations grow as prostrate shrubs, especially in sheltered nooks and crannies. The zones are uneven because these kinds of local shelter conditions may extend the limits of each zone. Forests may extend along ridges where squirrels and other nut gatherers have stored seed, so each situation may have endemic differences from any assumed model of tree line.
The increase in spacing after forest line is correlated with a decline in the quality of the habitat as the temperature decreases, the wind increases, and the soil becomes increasingly impoverished. As the energy content of the ecosystem decreases, the diversity of organisms in the ecosystem diminishes.
Trees that are more widely spaced have a greater chance of survival because a greater percentage of the stem is covered with foliage, and this foliage receives more light and heat. In addition, there is less competition in the roots for the available nutrients in the soil. The isolated condition, however, makes the trees more susceptible to wind damage, snow blast, and ice damage.
Tree form has a genetic component, because some species are able to exist in an erect form where other species cannot. Examples of this are limber pine (Pinus flexilis) and bristlecone pines (P. aristata and P. longaeva), which are found in the Colorado Rocky Mountains in the United States. These species form erect trees where Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmanni) and Alpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) can exist only as prostrate forms. One reason lies in the pines’ greater resistance to winter desiccation damage at high elevations, owing to the thick coating of wax and cuticle on the surface of their needles. These species differences can result in double timberlines, where one tree species or group of species forms a tree line at a different elevation from another species or group of species.
Low temperature is the main arbiter of timberlines. This is dramatically apparent in the higher timberlines that can be observed on the sunnier slopes of a mountain. Low temperature is also the reason for the increase in tree line in interior mountains with warmer summers, such as the Rocky Mountains (about 3,000–3,350 metres, or 10,000–11,000 feet), as opposed to coastal mountains, such as the White Mountains of New Hampshire, U.S. (approximately 1,400 metres, or 4,600 feet), where the summers are cooler and cloudier.
Another manifestation of the heat balance effect is the increase in altitudinal tree lines as latitude decreases in the Northern Hemisphere from the subarctic to the subtropical. In general, tree form is possible wherever the mean temperature for the month of July is equal to or greater than 10 °C (50 °F). A somewhat better fit can be obtained by using the point where the daily maximum temperature is greater than or equal to 11.1 °C (52 °F) during the growing season.
The low temperatures in the Alpine environment stem from the decrease in temperature with elevation: warm air rises; as it does so, it expands and cools. The expansion requires work (in the form of heat) to be expended in the process, and temperature drops. In general, there is a 1 °C drop in temperature for every 100-metre rise in elevation (or, roughly, 2.5 °F for every 500 feet). However, the temperature drop varies somewhat with conditions on individual mountains (e.g., wet versus dry mountain ranges). Larger mountain massifs also show a smaller drop in temperature with increase in altitude. This is because the air mass impinging on the large massif must rise over the entire structure, and the air mass does not cool as much as when only a portion of it rises over a smaller or more isolated mountain. As a consequence, timberlines are higher on a larger mountain range for a given latitude, location, and climate. Nevertheless, other factors, such as radiation, moisture, cloudiness, wind, snow and snow blast, ice, and physiography, affect tree lines to various degrees.
Trees that grow at high elevations are adapted to this environment. The high-elevation environment is characterized by higher light intensity (when clear) and proportion of ultraviolet radiation, lower absolute humidity (which favours water loss) and carbon dioxide content, frequent high winds, and greater daily temperature fluctuations, radiation of heat out into space (especially at night), and precipitation (although some alpine areas are subject to drought at times). Any or all of these factors can interact to bring about unique formations. For example, cold air drainages at the crest of valleys can cause a local depression of timberline. The reason low temperatures affect timberline is that they slow biological processes, which decreases the production of dry matter, a condition that is exacerbated by the shortened growing season. As a result, fewer of the cells, tissues, and storage molecules that are needed for annual growth and reproduction are formed. If the growing season is shortened too much, the optimum amount of supportive tissue may not be formed.
The covering layers of the tree surface also are important in resisting environmental stresses. The biotic stress and inadequate energy production and allocation that occur when temperature is sufficiently low may impair the optimum development of these superficial layers and increase the vulnerability of the tree.
Seed production requires energy reserves that may not normally be available each year. The interval between good seed years increases with elevation and latitude. It is another important aspect of survival in the cold at high elevation, although species at high elevation compensate for this somewhat by relying more heavily on asexual reproduction. Thus, the tree line may be considered to be an equilibrium space between the forces of regeneration upward and mortality downward.
Cloudiness can lower tree lines because it decreases the photosynthesis-to-respiration ratio, causing a carbon deficit. For example, the tree line is lower on the warmer, cloudier western coast of Scotland than it is on the colder, clearer eastern coast because on the west the cloudy weather limits photosynthesis, while the warmer temperatures promote respiration.
The factors that limit tree growth at high elevation and extreme latitude indirectly promote longevity, as in the case of the Great Basin bristlecone pine (P. longaeva). The factors involved are smaller tree size, slower growth rate (possibly mediated by lower night temperatures), larger allocation of carbon to roots as opposed to tops (stems and leaves), cold hardiness, efficient use of water, more reliance on asexual reproduction, and fewer pathogens in the environment.
Some long-lived trees, such as the Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), have been found in lava beds, suggesting that reduced competition and the presence of fewer pathogens in this environment might be factors in the long life spans. This harsh environment probably also reduces the developmental rate, which is correlated with increased life span in some species.
The major difference between subarctic and subalpine timberline environments is that the subalpine environment has greater light intensity and more ultraviolet light, less variation in the length of the day, lower carbon dioxide, and more daily temperature variation. The subalpine also has higher precipitation, especially snow, but the soil is generally drier because of better soil drainage and the mountainous topography. The factors that are common to both are the short growing season, low temperatures, and high winds. Mountains located in arid areas may show additional complexity along elevational gradients owing to marked changes in both water availability and temperature. In the southwestern United States, small piñon pines may grow at the base of mountains, and, as elevation increases, temperature decreases along with water stress. Tree height increases as the larger ponderosa pines dominate; these in turn may give way to Douglas fir. At higher altitudes, spruce and fir predominate, and they decrease in height with altitude, forming tree lines at the upper limits.