Association between tree-ring and needle δ13C and leaf gas exchange in Pinus halepensis under semi-arid conditions
- 3 May 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 144 (1) , 45-54
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0002-y
Abstract
Associations between δ13C values and leaf gas exchanges and tree-ring or needle growth, used in ecophysiological compositions, can be complex depending on the relative timing of CO2 uptake and subsequent redistribution and allocation of carbon to needle and stem components. For palaeoenvironmental and dendroecological studies it is often interpreted in terms of a simple model of δ13C fractionation in C3 plants. However, in spite of potential complicating factors, few studies have actually examined these relationships in mature trees over inter- and intra-annual time-scales. Here, we present results from a 4 years study that investigated the links between variations in leaf gas-exchange properties, growth, and dated δ13C values along the needles and across tree rings of Aleppo pine trees growing in a semi-arid region under natural conditions or with supplemental summer irrigation. Sub-sections of tissue across annual rings and along needles, for which time of formation was resolved from growth rate analyses, showed rapid growth and δ13C responses to changing environmental conditions. Seasonal cycles of growth and δ13C (up to ~4‰) significantly correlated (P13C values and its sensitivity to environmental parameters. The δ13C estimates derived from gas-exchange parameters, and weighted by assimilation, compared closely with seasonal and inter-annual δ13C values of needle- and tree-ring tissue. Higher stomatal conductances of the irrigated trees (0.22 vs. 0.08 mol m−2 s−1 on average) corresponded with ~2.0‰ lower average δ13C values, both measured and derived. Derived and measured δ13C values also indicated that needle growth, which occurs throughout the stressful summer was supported by carbon from concurrent, low rate assimilation. For Aleppo pine under semi-arid and irrigated conditions, the δ13C of tree-ring and needle material proved, in general, to be a reasonable indicator of integrated leaf gas-exchange properties.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temporal scaling of physiological responses from gas exchange to tree rings: a gender‐specific study of Acer negundo (Boxelder) growing under different conditionsFunctional Ecology, 2004
- ?13C and tree-ring width reflect different drought responses in Quercus ilex and Pinus halepensisOecologia, 2003
- Carbon sequestration in arid‐land forestGlobal Change Biology, 2003
- High-resolution stable isotope analysis of tree rings: implications of 'microdendroclimatology' for palaeoenvironmental researchThe Holocene, 1995
- Carbon isotopes of trees from arid environments and implications for reconstructing atmospheric CO2 concentrationGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1995
- Reporting of stable hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen isotopic abundances (Technical Report)Pure and Applied Chemistry, 1994
- Correlations between the 13C Content of Primary and Secondary Plant Products in Different Cell Compartments and That in Decomposing BasidiomycetesPlant Physiology, 1993
- The Atmospheric δ13C Record as Derived from 56 Pinyon Trees at 14 Sites in the Southwestern United StatesRadiocarbon, 1989
- Cambial Activity of Evergreen and Seasonal Dimorphics Around the MediterraneanIAWA Journal, 1986
- On the Relationship Between Carbon Isotope Discrimination and the Intercellular Carbon Dioxide Concentration in LeavesFunctional Plant Biology, 1982