Sensitivity to climate change and anthropogenic disturbance is a typical feature of Mediterranean forests growing under dynamic and manipulated environmental conditions. In the present study, a large sample of stone pines (Pinus pinea L.) was analyzed in five sites of Castelporziano and Castelfusano forests (Rome, central Italy) to assess tree-growth variability with the aim to derive information on long-term climatic trends possibly reflected in the radial growth response. The multivariate exploratory analysis of tree ring widths, which were standardized to remove the age trend, showed a marked spatial variability among sites and a heterogeneous time pattern that allows for the classification of the investigated years into three homogeneous groups : 1964: -1974: , 1975: -1997: , and 1998: . The years 1975: and 1998 were identified as the candidate break points in the local climate regime. Coherence of the 1998 break point was verified by comparing two time intervals (1981-1997 and 1998-2011) of the meteorological time series of precipitation and temperatures available for Castelporziano station. Results indicate a significant shift toward aridity and warming in the area supporting the information obtained from the analysis of dendro-chronological time series. Implications of the spatio-temporal monitoring of climate variations through indirect sources are discussed in the light of conservation of the residual pristine forest of Castelporziano taken as a paradigmatic example for other Mediterranean coastal forests.