Congratulations to Nia Perron who successfully defended her PhD thesis “Variability in tree-water relations from tree-line to tree-line in Canada’s western boreal forest.” Nia was co-supervised by Dr. Jennifer Baltzer and Dr. Oliver Sonnentag.
See some photos from Nia’s fieldwork below:





Interested in learning more about Nia’s thesis? Here is her abstract:
In the boreal forest, air temperatures are increasing, and precipitation regimes are changing, leading to amplified intensity and frequency of drought conditions. Changes are projected to continue, resulting in complex and variable effects on boreal forest vegetation including drought-induced forest compositional changes, tree mortality and, in some places, forest loss. The objective l of this work was to provide an improved functional understanding of tree-water relationships for two common and co-occurring boreal tree species (black spruce; Picea mariana and tamarack; Larix laricina) across Canada’s western boreal forest. To achieve this objective, I explored how different elements of tree-water relations, including transpiration, and tree water deficit were affected by local conditions (stand structure, edaphic conditions, and land cover type), tree functional strategies (structural and foliar traits), and/or meteorological conditions (vapor pressure deficit, radiation, air temperature, rain, and evapotranspiration). In Chapter 2, I explored the coordination between resource-use strategies of tamarack and black spruce, and found that acquisitive resource-use resulted in higher productivity in tamarack, when water availability was high, nutrients were not limited and competition for light was favourable. Black spruce, by contrast, had slow resource acquisition, prioritizing water conservation over radial growth. Next, in Chapter 3, I determined that transpiration of black spruce and tamarack were influenced by site heterogeneity across a forested boreal peatland complex, leading to variability in the contribution of stand-level transpiration to ecosystem evapotranspiration. Finally, in Chapter 4, I paired environmental variables with species-level tree water deficit to determine the drivers of water-stress in black spruce and tamarack across five sites spanning the extent of the boreal biome in western North America from the southern to northern boreal tree-line. I determined that the daily tree water deficit was controlled by transpiration, while longer periods (days to weeks) of drought stress were controlled by solar radiation and water availability. Both short and long periods of tree water deficit caused greater stand-level fluxes of evapotranspiration. Understanding water relations of tree species in Canada’s western boreal biome is of utmost importance as water availability is projected to become increasingly limited in this region. Although tree species have different strategies to cope with current conditions in the boreal forest, there is uncertainty regarding the resilience of black spruce and tamarack to projected environmental changes. Continued work to quantify the responses of common and widespread tree species to progressively water-limited conditions will help to understand the resilience of boreal forests in the face of rapid environmental change, and to maintain their ecosystem services related to climate regulation, carbon sequestration, wildlife habitat, culture and economy.