Extracting a common high frequency signal from Northern Quebec black spruce tree-rings with a Bayesian hierarchical model

One basic premise of dendroclimatology is that tree rings can be viewed as climate proxies, i.e. rings are assumed to contain some hidden information about past climate. From a statistical perspective, this extraction problem can be understood as the search of a hidden variable which represents the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J.-J. Boreux, P. Naveau, O. Guin, L. Perreault, J. Bernier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009-10-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/5/607/2009/cp-5-607-2009.pdf
Description
Summary:One basic premise of dendroclimatology is that tree rings can be viewed as climate proxies, i.e. rings are assumed to contain some hidden information about past climate. From a statistical perspective, this extraction problem can be understood as the search of a hidden variable which represents the common signal within a collection of tree-ring width series. Classical average-based techniques used in dendrochronology have been applied to estimate the mean behavior of this latent variable. Still, depending on tree species, regional factors and statistical methods, a precise quantification of uncertainties associated to the hidden variable distribution is difficult to assess. To model the error propagation throughout the extraction procedure, we propose and study a Bayesian hierarchical model that focuses on extracting an inter-annual high frequency signal. Our method is applied to black spruce (<i>Picea mariana</i>) tree-rings recorded in Northern Quebec and compared to a classical average-based techniques used by dendrochronologists (Cook and Kairiukstis, 1992).
ISSN:1814-9324
1814-9332