4.6 Article

Interpreting tree responses to thinning and fertilization using tree-ring stable isotopes

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 190, Issue 3, Pages 770-782

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2010.03627.x

Keywords

canopy microclimate; carbon isotopes; fertilization; growth dynamics; leaf nitrogen; oxygen isotopes; Pseudotsuga menziesii (Douglas-fir); thinning

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Funding

  1. US Environmental Protection Agency

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P>Carbon sequestration has focused renewed interest in understanding how forest management affects forest carbon gain over timescales of decades, and yet details of the physiological mechanisms over decades are often lacking for understanding long-term growth responses to management. Here, we examined tree-ring growth patterns and stable isotopes of cellulose (delta 13C(cell) and delta 18O(cell)) in a thinning and fertilization controlled experiment where growth increased substantially in response to treatments to elucidate physiological data and to test the dual isotope approach for uses in other locations. delta 13C(cell) and delta 18O(cell) results indicated that fertilization caused an increase in intrinsic water-use efficiency through increases in photosynthesis (A) for the first 3 yr. The combination treatment caused a much larger increase in A and water-use efficiency. Only the thinning treatments showed consistent significant increases in delta 18O(cell) above controls. Changes in canopy microclimate are the likely drivers for delta 18O(cell) increases with decreases in relative humidity and increases in leaf temperature associated with thinning being the most probable causes. Tree-ring isotopic records, particularly delta 13C(cell), remain a viable way to reconstruct long-term physiological mechanisms affecting tree carbon gain in response to management and climate fluctuations.

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