Mountain Treelines: a Roadmap for Research Orientation

For over 100 years, mountain treelines have been the subject of varied research endeavors and remain a strong area of investigation. The purpose of this paper is to examine aspects of the epistemology of mountain treeline research—that is, to investigate how knowledge on treelines has been acquired...

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Published inArctic, antarctic, and alpine research Vol. 43; no. 2; pp. 167 - 177
Main Authors Malanson, George P, Resler, Lynn M, Bader, Maaike Y, Holtmeier, Friedrich-Karl, Butler, David R, Weiss, Daniel J, Daniels, Lori D, Fagre, Daniel B
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published UCB 450, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0450, U.S.A The Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research 01.05.2011
Taylor & Francis
Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
University of Colorado, Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
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Summary:For over 100 years, mountain treelines have been the subject of varied research endeavors and remain a strong area of investigation. The purpose of this paper is to examine aspects of the epistemology of mountain treeline research—that is, to investigate how knowledge on treelines has been acquired and the changes in knowledge acquisition over time, through a review of fundamental questions and approaches. The questions treeline researchers have raised and continue to raise have undoubtedly directed the current state of knowledge. A continuing, fundamental emphasis has centered on seeking the general cause of mountain treelines, thus seeking an answer to the question, “What causes treeline?” with a primary emphasis on searching for ecophysiological mechanisms of low-temperature limitation for tree growth and regeneration. However, treeline research today also includes a rich literature that seeks local, landscape-scale causes of treelines and reasons why treelines vary so widely in three-dimensional patterns from one location to the next, and this approach and some of its consequences are elaborated here. In recent years, both lines of research have been motivated greatly by global climate change. Given the current state of knowledge, we propose that future research directions focused on a spatial approach should specifically address cross-scale hypotheses using statistics and simulations designed for nested hierarchies; these analyses will benefit from geographic extension of treeline research.
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ISSN:1523-0430
1938-4246
DOI:10.1657/1938-4246-43.2.167