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Dive into the research topics where Olga V. Churakova is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga V. Churakova.


Environmental Research Letters | 2016

Diverse growth trends and climate responses across Eurasia’s boreal forest

Lena Hellmann; Leonid Agafonov; Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist; Olga V. Churakova; Elisabeth Düthorn; Jan Esper; Lisa Hülsmann; Alexander V. Kirdyanov; Pavel Moiseev; Vladimir S. Myglan; Anatoly N. Nikolaev; Frederick Reinig; Fritz H. Schweingruber; Olga Solomina; Willy Tegel; Ulf Büntgen

The area covered by boreal forests accounts for similar to 16% of the global and 22% of the Northern Hemisphere landmass. Changes in the productivity and functioning of this circumpolar biome not o ...


Tree Physiology | 2016

Site-specific water-use strategies of mountain pine and larch to cope with recent climate change

Olga V. Churakova; Matthias Saurer; Marina V. Bryukhanova; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Christof Bigler

We aim to achieve a mechanistic understanding of the eco-physiological processes in Larix decidua and Pinus mugo var. uncinata growing on north- and south-facing aspects in the Swiss National Park in order to distinguish the short- and long-term effects of a changing climate. To strengthen the interpretation of the δ(18)O signal in tree rings and its coherence with the main factors and processes driving evaporative δ(18)O needle water enrichment, we analyzed the δ(18)O in needle, xylem and soil water over the growing season in 2013 and applied the mechanistic Craig-Gordon model (1965) for the short-term responses. We found that δ(18)O needle water strongly reflected the variability of relative humidity mainly for larch, while only δ(18)O in pine xylem water showed a strong link to δ(18)O in precipitation. Larger differences in offsets between modeled and measured δ(18)O needle water for both species from the south-facing aspects were detected, which could be explained by the high transpiration rates. Different soil water and needle water responses for the two species indicate different water-use strategies, further modulated by the site conditions. To reveal the long-term physiological response of the studied trees to recent and past climate changes, we analyzed δ(13)C and δ(18)O in wood chronologies from 1900 to 2013. Summer temperatures as well as summer and annual amount of precipitations are important factors for growth of both studied species from both aspects. However, mountain pine trees reduced sensitivity to temperature changes, while precipitation changes come to play an important role for the period from 1980 to 2013. Intrinsic water-use efficiency (WUEi) calculated for larch trees since the 1990s reached a saturation point at elevated CO2 Divergent trends between pine WUEi and δ(18)O are most likely indicative of a decline of mountain pine trees and are also reflected in decoupling mechanisms in the isotope signals between needles and tree-rings.


Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research | 2015

Timber Logging in Central Siberia is the Main Source for Recent Arctic Driftwood

Lena Hellmann; Willy Tegel; Alexander V. Kirdyanov; Ólafur Eggertsson; Jan Esper; Leonid Agafonov; Anatoly N. Nikolaev; Anastasia A. Knorre; Vladimir S. Myglan; Olga V. Churakova; Fritz H. Schweingruber; Daniel Nievergelt; Anne Verstege; Ulf Büntgen

Abstract Recent findings indicated spruce from North America and larch from eastern Siberia to be the dominating tree species of Arctic driftwood throughout the Holocene. However, changes in source region forest and river characteristics, as well as ocean current dynamics and sea ice extent likely influence its spatiotemporal composition. Here, we present 2556 driftwood samples from Greenland, Iceland, Svalbard, and the Faroe Islands. A total of 498 out of 969 Pinus sylvestris ring width series were cross-dated at the catchment level against a network of Eurasian boreal reference chronologies. The central Siberian Yenisei and Angara Rivers account for 91% of all dated pines, with their outermost rings dating between 1804 and 1999. Intensified logging and timber rafting along the Yenisei and Angara in the mid-20th century, together with high discharge rates, explain the vast quantity of material from this region and its temporal peak ca. 1960. Based on the combined application of wood-anatomical and dendrochronological techniques on a well-replicated data set, our results question the assumption that Arctic driftwood mainly consists of millennial-old larch and spruce. Nevertheless, data from other species and regions, together with longer boreal reference chronologies, are needed for generating reliable proxy archives at the interface of marine and terrestrial environments.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2015

Examining the response of needle carbohydrates from Siberian larch trees to climate using compound-specific δ 13 C and concentration analyses

K. T. Rinne; Matthias Saurer; Alexander V. Kirdyanov; Marina V. Bryukhanova; A. S. Prokushkin; Olga V. Churakova; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf

Little is known about the dynamics of concentrations and carbon isotope ratios of individual carbohydrates in leaves in response to climatic and physiological factors. Improved knowledge of the isotopic ratio in sugars will enhance our understanding of the tree ring isotope ratio and will help to decipher environmental conditions in retrospect more reliably. Carbohydrate samples from larch (Larix gmelinii) needles of two sites in the continuous permafrost zone of Siberia with differing growth conditions were analysed with the Compound-Specific Isotope Analysis (CSIA). We compared concentrations and carbon isotope values (δ(13) C) of sucrose, fructose, glucose and pinitol combined with phenological data. The results for the variability of the needle carbohydrates show high dynamics with distinct seasonal characteristics between and within the studied years with a clear link to the climatic conditions, particularly vapour pressure deficit. Compound-specific differences in δ(13) C values as a response to climate were detected. The δ(13) C of pinitol, which contributes up to 50% of total soluble carbohydrates, was almost invariant during the whole growing season. Our study provides the first in-depth characterization of compound-specific needle carbohydrate isotope variability, identifies involved mechanisms and shows the potential of such results for linking tree physiological responses to different climatic conditions.


Nature Geoscience | 2017

Climate response to the Samalas volcanic eruption in 1257 revealed by proxy records

Sébastien Guillet; Christophe Corona; Markus Stoffel; Myriam Khodri; Franck Lavigne; Pablo Ortega; Nicolas Eckert; Pascal Dkengne Sielenou; Valérie Daux; Olga V. Churakova; Nicole Davi; Jean-Louis Edouard; Yong Zhang; Brian H. Luckman; Vladimir S. Myglan; Joël Guiot; Martin Beniston; Valérie Masson-Delmotte; Clive Oppenheimer


Trees-structure and Function | 2014

Increasing relevance of spring temperatures for Norway spruce trees in Davos, Switzerland, after the 1950s

Olga V. Churakova; Werner Eugster; S. Zielis; Paolo Cherubini; Sophia Etzold; Matthias Saurer; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Nina Buchmann


Dendrochronologia | 2016

Regional coherency of boreal forest growth defines Arctic driftwood provenancing

Lena Hellmann; Leonid Agafonov; Olga V. Churakova; Elisabeth Düthorn; Ólafur Eggertsson; Jan Esper; Alexander V. Kirdyanov; Anastasia A. Knorre; Pavel Moiseev; Vladimir S. Myglan; Anatoly N. Nikolaev; Frederick Reinig; Fritz H. Schweingruber; Olga Solomina; Willy Tegel; Ulf Büntgen


Dendrochronologia | 2015

The response of δ13C, δ18O and cell anatomy of Larix gmelinii tree rings to differing soil active layer depths

Marina V. Bryukhanova; Patrick Fonti; Alexander V. Kirdyanov; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Matthias Saurer; Natalia P. Pochebyt; Olga V. Churakova; A. S. Prokushkin


Global and Planetary Change | 2014

A cluster of stratospheric volcanic eruptions in the AD 530s recorded in Siberian tree rings

Olga V. Churakova; Marina V. Bryukhanova; Matthias Saurer; Tatjana Boettger; Mukhtar M. Naurzbaev; Vladimir S. Myglan; Eugene A. Vaganov; Malcolm K. Hughes; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf


eco.mont-Journal on Protected Mountain Areas Research and Management | 2016

The scientific councils of Alpine protected areas: an overview and analysis of their contribution to linking science and management

Isabelle Arpin; Gaëlle Ronsin; Thomas Scheurer; Astrid Wallner; Fabien Hoblea; Olga V. Churakova; Dominik Cremer-Schulte; Valerie Braun

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Vladimir S. Myglan

Siberian Federal University

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Anatoly N. Nikolaev

North-Eastern Federal University

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Willy Tegel

University of Freiburg

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Ulf Büntgen

University of Cambridge

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