To explore the responses of different tree species growth to climate change in the semihumid region of the eastern Tibetan Plateau,we investigated climate-growth relationships of Tsuga chinensis,Abies faxoniana,Picea purpurea at an altitude of 3000 m (low altitude) and A. faxoniana and Larix mastersiana at an altitude of 4000 m (high altitude) using tree ring-width chronologies (total of 182 cores) developed from Miyaluo,western Sichuan,China. Five residual chronologies were developed from the cross-dated ring width series using the program ARSTAN,and the relationships between monthly climate variables and tree-ring index were analyzed. Results showed that the chronologies of trees at low altitudes were negatively correlated with air temperature but positively with precipitation in April and May. This indicated that drought stress limited tree growth at low altitude,but different tree species showed significant variations. T. chinensis was most severely affected by drought stress,followed by A. faxoniana and P. purpurea. Trees at high altitude were mainly affected by growing season temperature. Tree-ring index of A. faxoniana was positively correlated with monthly minimum temperature in February and July of the current year and monthly maximum temperature in October of the previous year. Radial growth of L. mastersiana was positively correlated with monthly maximum temperature in May,and negatively with monthly mean temperature in February and monthly minimum temperature in March. In recent decadal years,the climate in northeast Tibetan Plateau had a warming and drying trend. If this trend continues,we could deduce that P. purpurea should grow faster than T. chinensis and A. faxoniana at low altitudes,while A. faxo-niana would benefit more from global warming at high altitudes.