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Featured researches published by Ewan Woodley.


Global Change Biology | 2014

Spatial variability and temporal trends in water‐use efficiency of European forests

Matthias Saurer; Renato Spahni; David Frank; Fortunat Joos; Markus Leuenberger; Neil J. Loader; Danny McCarroll; Mary Gagen; Ben Poulter; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Laia Andreu-Hayles; Tatjana Boettger; Isabel Dorado Liñán; Ian J. Fairchild; Michael Friedrich; Emilia Gutiérrez; Marika Haupt; Emmi Hilasvuori; Ingo Heinrich; Gerd Helle; Håkan Grudd; Risto Jalkanen; Tom Levanič; Hans W. Linderholm; Iain Robertson; Eloni Sonninen; Kerstin Treydte; John S. Waterhouse; Ewan Woodley; Peter M. Wynn

The increasing carbon dioxide (CO2 ) concentration in the atmosphere in combination with climatic changes throughout the last century are likely to have had a profound effect on the physiology of trees: altering the carbon and water fluxes passing through the stomatal pores. However, the magnitude and spatial patterns of such changes in natural forests remain highly uncertain. Here, stable carbon isotope ratios from a network of 35 tree-ring sites located across Europe are investigated to determine the intrinsic water-use efficiency (iWUE), the ratio of photosynthesis to stomatal conductance from 1901 to 2000. The results were compared with simulations of a dynamic vegetation model (LPX-Bern 1.0) that integrates numerous ecosystem and land-atmosphere exchange processes in a theoretical framework. The spatial pattern of tree-ring derived iWUE of the investigated coniferous and deciduous species and the model results agreed significantly with a clear south-to-north gradient, as well as a general increase in iWUE over the 20th century. The magnitude of the iWUE increase was not spatially uniform, with the strongest increase observed and modelled for temperate forests in Central Europe, a region where summer soil-water availability decreased over the last century. We were able to demonstrate that the combined effects of increasing CO2 and climate change leading to soil drying have resulted in an accelerated increase in iWUE. These findings will help to reduce uncertainties in the land surface schemes of global climate models, where vegetation-climate feedbacks are currently still poorly constrained by observational data.


web science | 2012

Deglaciation and catchment ontogeny in coastal south-west Greenland: implications for terrestrial and aquatic carbon cycling

Melanie J. Leng; Bernd Wagner; Nj Anderson; Ole Bennike; Ewan Woodley; S.J. Kemp

Here we present Holocene organic carbon, nitrogen, sulphur, carbon isotope ratio and macrofossil data from a small freshwater lake near Sisimiut in south-west Greenland. The lake was formed c. 11 cal ka BP following retreat of the ice sheet margin and is located above the marine limit in this area. The elemental and isotope data suggest a complex deglaciation history of interactions between the lake and its catchment, reflecting glacial retreat and post-glacial hydrological flushing probably due to periodic melting of local remnant glacial ice and firn areas between 11 and 8.5 cal ka BP. After 8.5 cal ka BP, soil development and associated vegetation processes began to exert a greater control on terrestrial–aquatic carbon cycling. By 5.5 cal ka BP, in the early Neoglacial cooling, the sediment record indicates a change in catchment–lake interactions with consistent δ13C while C/N exhibits greater variability. The period after 5.5 cal ka BP is also characterized by higher organic C accumulation in the lake. These changes (total organic carbon, C/N, δ13C) are most likely the result of increasing contribution (and burial) of terrestrial organic matter as a result of enhanced soil instability, as indicated by an increase in Cenococcum remains, but also Sphagnum and Empetrum. The impact of glacial retreat and relatively subdued mid- to late Holocene climate variation at the coast is in marked contrast to the greater environmental variability seen in inland lakes closer to the present-day ice sheet margin.


Scopus | 2012

Deglaciation and catchment ontogeny in coastal south-west greenland: Implications for terrestrial and aquatic carbon cycling

Melanie J. Leng; Bernd Wagner; N. John Anderson; Ole Bennike; Ewan Woodley; S.J. Kemp

Here we present Holocene organic carbon, nitrogen, sulphur, carbon isotope ratio and macrofossil data from a small freshwater lake near Sisimiut in south-west Greenland. The lake was formed c. 11 cal ka BP following retreat of the ice sheet margin and is located above the marine limit in this area. The elemental and isotope data suggest a complex deglaciation history of interactions between the lake and its catchment, reflecting glacial retreat and post-glacial hydrological flushing probably due to periodic melting of local remnant glacial ice and firn areas between 11 and 8.5 cal ka BP. After 8.5 cal ka BP, soil development and associated vegetation processes began to exert a greater control on terrestrial–aquatic carbon cycling. By 5.5 cal ka BP, in the early Neoglacial cooling, the sediment record indicates a change in catchment–lake interactions with consistent δ13C while C/N exhibits greater variability. The period after 5.5 cal ka BP is also characterized by higher organic C accumulation in the lake. These changes (total organic carbon, C/N, δ13C) are most likely the result of increasing contribution (and burial) of terrestrial organic matter as a result of enhanced soil instability, as indicated by an increase in Cenococcum remains, but also Sphagnum and Empetrum. The impact of glacial retreat and relatively subdued mid- to late Holocene climate variation at the coast is in marked contrast to the greater environmental variability seen in inland lakes closer to the present-day ice sheet margin.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013

Understanding past climatic and hydrological variability in the Mediterranean from Lake Prespa sediment isotope and geochemical record over the Last Glacial cycle

Melanie J. Leng; Bernd Wagner; Anne Boehm; Konstantinos Panagiotopoulos; Christopher H. Vane; Andrea M. Snelling; Cheryl Haidon; Ewan Woodley; Hendrik Vogel; Gianni Zanchetta; Ilaria Baneschi


Chemical Geology | 2012

Estimating uncertainty in pooled stable isotope time-series from tree-rings

Ewan Woodley; Neil J. Loader; Danny McCarroll; Giles H. F. Young; Iain Robertson; T.H.E. Heaton; Mary Gagen


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015

The 5.2 ka climate event: Evidence from stable isotope and multi-proxy palaeoecological peatland records in Ireland

Thomas P. Roland; T.J. Daley; Chris Caseldine; Dan J. Charman; Chris S. M. Turney; Matthew J. Amesbury; Gareth Thompson; Ewan Woodley


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2012

High-temperature pyrolysis/gas chromatography/isotope ratio mass spectrometry: simultaneous measurement of the stable isotopes of oxygen and carbon in cellulose

Ewan Woodley; Neil J. Loader; Danny McCarroll; Giles H. F. Young; Iain Robertson; T.H.E. Heaton; Mary Gagen; Joseph O. Warham


Forest Ecology and Management | 2010

Exploring for senescence signals in native Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L) in the Scottish highlands

T. Fish; Rob Wilson; C. Edwards; C. Mills; Anne Crone; Andreas J. Kirchhefer; Hans W. Linderholm; Neil J. Loader; Ewan Woodley


Global Change Biology | 2013

Comparing the performance of different stomatal conductance models using modelled and measured plant carbon isotope ratios (δ13C): implications for assessing physiological forcing

Per E. Bodin; Mary Gagen; Danny McCarroll; Neil J. Loader; Risto Jalkanen; Iain Robertson; Vincent R Switsur; John S. Waterhouse; Ewan Woodley; Giles H. F. Young; Paul B. Alton


Archive | 2010

Do stable oxygen isotope series from Pinus sylvestris growing in Scotland retain information on precipitation dynamics

Ewan Woodley; Neil J. Loader; Danny McCarroll; Iain Robertson; Timothy L. Heaton

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Melanie J. Leng

British Geological Survey

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C. Mills

University of St Andrews

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Rob Wilson

University of St Andrews

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