4.5 Article

Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance for the in vivo study of water content in trees

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Plant Sciences

How do trees die? A test of the hydraulic failure and carbon starvation hypotheses

Sanna Sevanto et al.

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT (2014)

Article Plant Sciences

MRI links stem water content to stem diameter variations in transpiring trees

Veerle De Schepper et al.

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY (2012)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

A transportable magnetic resonance imaging system for in situ measurements of living trees: The Tree Hugger

M. Jones et al.

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE (2012)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

A portable Halbach magnet that can be opened and closed without force: The NMR-CUFF

Care W. Windt et al.

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE (2011)

Editorial Material Plant Sciences

Mechanisms Linking Drought, Hydraulics, Carbon Metabolism, and Vegetation Mortality

Nathan G. McDowell

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY (2011)

Article Forestry

Nighttime transpiration in woody plants from contrasting ecosystems

Todd E. Dawson et al.

TREE PHYSIOLOGY (2007)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Correlated displacement-T2 MRI by means of a Pulsed Field Gradient-Multi Spin Echo method

Carel W. Windt et al.

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE (2007)

Article Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical

0.7 and 3 T MRI and sap flow in intact trees: Xylem and phloem in action

N. M. Homan et al.

APPLIED MAGNETIC RESONANCE (2007)

Article Agronomy

Evapotranspiration components determined by stable isotope, sap flow and eddy covariance techniques

DG Williams et al.

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY (2004)