Ring widths of five Mediterranean forest tree species (Arbutus unedo, Fraxinus ornus, Quercus cerris, Quercus ilex
and Quercus pubescens) growing close to a natural source of CO2 in Tuscany, Italy and at a nearby control site were
compared. At the CO2-enriched site, trees have been growing for decades under elevated CO2 concentrations.
They originated from parent trees that also grew under elevated CO2 in natural conditions, and they have been
continuously exposed to elevated CO2 throughout their growth. Tree-ring series from each of the species were
prepared. Assigning calendar dates to rings was difficult but possible, and ring-width series were built for all
species. The ring-width data were analysed using a two-sided t-test to assess if there was a difference between the
radial growth at the CO2-enriched site and the control site. The cumulative basal area at the same cambial age at
both sites was also compared using a Wilcoxon test. Radial growth of trees at the CO2-enriched site was not
significantly different from growth at the control site. For each species, year by year, radial growth at the CO2-enriched site was tested against the control site and significant differences were found in only a few years; these
differences were not synchronous with extreme climatic events. The expected increase in above-ground
productivity, as one of the ecosystem responses to increasing CO2 during drought stress, was not observed in this
Mediterranean woody plant community, despite being water-limited. Other resource limitations, such as low
nutrient availability (common in the Mediterranean region), may have counteracted the positive effect of elevated
CO2 under drought stress, or trees may have acclimated to the high CO2.