NOAA/WDS Paleoclimatology - Thapa - Salle - PIRO - ITRDB NEPA060
This archived Paleoclimatology Study is available from the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), under the World Data Service (WDS) for Paleoclimatology. The associated NCEI study type is Tree Ring. The data include parameters of tree ring with a geographic location of Nepal, Southcentral Asia. The time period coverage is from 40 to -65 in calendar years before present (BP). See metadata information for parameter and study location details. Please cite this study when using the data.
- Cite as: Thapa, U.K. (2020-11-02): NOAA/WDS Paleoclimatology - Thapa - Salle - PIRO - ITRDB NEPA060. [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. https://doi.org/10.25921/83xq-zp31. Accessed [date].
- Please refer to Credit tab for full citation information.
- doi:10.25921/83xq-zp31
- noaa-tree-31742
- NCEI DSI 1200_02
- NCEI DSI 1200_01
noaa-tree-31742
Search Data |
|
Download Data |
|
Distribution Formats |
|
Ordering Instructions | Contact NCEI for other distribution options and instructions. |
Distributor | NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
ncei.info@noaa.gov |
Dataset Point of Contact | NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
ncei.info@noaa.gov |
Dataset Point of Contact | Data Center Contact
NOAA World Data Service for Paleoclimatology 828-271-4800 paleo@noaa.gov |
Coverage Description | Date Range: 1910 CE to 2015 CE; Date Range: 40 cal yr BP to -65 cal yr BP; |
Time Period | 1910 to 2015 |
Spatial Bounding Box Coordinates |
N: 26.97
S: 26.97
E: 86.7
W: 86.7
|
Spatial Coverage Map |
General Documentation |
|
Associated Resources |
|
Publication Dates |
|
Data Presentation Form | Digital table - digital representation of facts or figures systematically displayed, especially in columns
|
Dataset Progress Status | Complete - production of the data has been completed |
Data Update Frequency | Data update frequency not available |
Supplemental Information |
STUDY NOTES: Koshi River basin, Nepal NOAA Template Raw Measurements file added 2020-11-18.
ABSTRACT SUPPLIED BY ORIGINATOR: Pine forests provide goods and services crucial to more than ten million people living in the middle-mountains (600-4000m) of Nepal. These critically important forests are already often overexploited and could be at risk from future climate change. In order to investigate the combined effects of climate and human disturbances on the growth of pine forests, we established a new network of tree-ring sites in six Pinus wallichiana and four P. roxburghii forests across the dry inner valleys of eastern Nepal's Koshi River watershed. We produced measurements of total annual ring widths, and detrended individual tree-ring series with 67% cubic splines to produce site-level chronologies. The Koshi tree-ring chronologies were compared against local records of mean monthly temperature and total monthly rainfall to identify the main climatic factor(s) limiting pine growth. We also employed a relative growth change method to estimate growth releases and suppressions in ring-width series as indicators of disturbances. At all sites, trees are relatively young (median age was 102 years) and variations in ring-width provide estimates of tree growth over only the past century. Ring-width chronologies from the Koshi have a weak common signal strength in comparison to trees from the same species obtained from sites in the central Himalaya, and the climate-growth response of Koshi pines appears to be governed primarily by moisture balance during winter. Disturbance events evident in pine ring-width data are largely asynchronous, which suggests these forest have been historically perturbed by human influences rather than large-scale climatic or ecological influences. The sacred forest at Sikri contained the oldest living trees (118 years), had the lowest number of disturbance events, and preserved a stronger common signal, which provided additional evidence of the effects of humans on other pine forests in the Koshi basin. Based on our findings, we suggest that modeling the future growth and distribution of pine trees in eastern Nepal should consider winter moisture. Furthermore, management strategies to better conserve pine forests in eastern Nepal should incorporate the two competing influences of climate and human activities on tree growth. |
Purpose | Tree ring data from the International Tree Ring Data Bank and World Data Center for Paleoclimatology archives. Most data sets include raw treering measurements (most are annual ring width, with some collections of earlywood or latewood width or wood density), plus chronologies (standardized growth indices for a site compiled from multiple treering samples). Reconstructions of climate variables are included with some of these data sets. Each data type is stored in a separate data file; the data type is coded into the file name. For details please see: http://www.ncei.noaa.gov/products/paleoclimatology/tree-ring |
Dataset Citation |
|
Cited Authors |
|
Originators |
|
Publishers |
|
Theme keywords | Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
|
Data Center keywords | Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Data Center Keywords
|
Place keywords |
|
Use Constraints |
|
Access Constraints |
|
Fees |
|
Last Modified: 2023-05-22
For questions about the information on this page, please email: ncei.info@noaa.gov