@article{10272/28266, year = {2026}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/10272/28266}, abstract = {High-resolution climate reconstructions are needed to understand past and future climate–vegetation dynamics. However, climate reconstructions using ring width are scarce in temperate regions where climate has limited impacts on tree growth. In T´emiscamingue, white pine sunken logs represent valuable archives for long-term climate reconstructions, but white pine’s response to climate variations in this temperate region is unknown. Moreover, the most suitable proxies for climate reconstruction in white pine—ring widths or stable isotopes— remain unclear. This study evaluates which proxy, or combination of proxies, best captures climate signals in white pine radial growth across contrasting soil drainage conditions. Ring widths were measured in 60 trees from Opemican National Park (30 on each of fast and moderate drainage conditions). Carbon and oxygen isotope ratios were analyzed from five trees per site over the period 1950–2020. Climatic data from ERA5 were used to calibrate response functions. June-August drought index (SPEI) as well as June-July precipitation and temperature were the dominant climatic drivers on all proxies, regardless of drainage type. Bayesian linear models revealed that combining carbon isotopes with ring-width data provided the most robust reconstruction of June–July precipitation (r = 0.43), that combining oxygen isotopes with ring widths yielded the best reconstruction of June–July temperatures (r = 0.49), and that combining carbon and oxygen isotopes produced the best reconstruction of June-August SPEI (r = 0.45). This study is among the first to demonstrate the potential of a multi-proxy approach for climate reconstruction using white pine. Our results provide insights that may guide future climate reconstructions in temperate regions, where tree species with lower climate sensitivity could also be considered.}, organization = {This research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) discovery grant to reconstruct the regime of natural disturbances in forest ecosystems (RGPIN- 2022–05423). First author was supported by the excellence scholarship programs from Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships (CGV-180844) and the Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Nature et Technologies (315933).}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {Eastern white pine ring proxies show potential for climate reconstruction in a Canadian temperate forest}, doi = {10.1016/j.dendro.2026.126507}, author = {Labrecque Foy, Julie Pascale and Lemay, Marc-André and Gennaretti, Fabio and Boucher, Étienne and Arseneault, Dominique and Montoro Girona, Miguel}, }