“…Lowland vegetation is in general more prone to freezing damage when advective frosts occur in agreement with recent studies in savannas in South Africa and Brazil (Hoffmann et al, ; Muller et al, ; Whitecross et al, ). This finding can be explained by the strong influence of elevation on temperature distribution at the regional and landscape level (Florinsky, Kulagina, & Meshalkina, ; Hummer‐Miller, ; Matusick, Ruthrof, Brouwers, & Hardy, ), driving the movement of cold air masses downhill during an advective frost (Kalma, Laughlin, Caprio, & Hamer, ; Lindkvist & Lindqvist, ). Accordingly, the historic cold wave that caused the February 2011 severe frost entered our study area from the adjacent northeastern mountains and drained into the lowlands where cold air remained for at least three consecutive days, leading to the widespread frost‐induced tree mortality episode.…”