With changing climatic conditions, there are currently many questions about the response of individual tree species to this phenomenon. Research shows that climate changes have an impact on tree production, with some tree species responding by increasing their increment, others by decreasing it, which also depends on the ecological demands of individual species and their occurrence within their range. So far, the relationship between these reactions and the tree social status in the forest stand has been less studied, and the results of various studies on this topic differ. This master thesis is aimed at investigating the correlation between changing climatic characteristics and incremental responses of Silver fir (Abies alba Mill.), Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in relation to their social status in the stand. The response to these changes varies both between individual tree species and within one species in different localities. Dominant fir individuals in Spiš responded to more rainfall in the rainiest months June and July by increasing their increment, while in Poľana this effect was not proven. But the lower beech trees in Poľana responded by increasing their increment to higher temperatures, although only in one, the warmest month July. In the case of spruce, the connection between the changing climatic characteristics and the production of this tree species has not been proven.