4.5 Article

Effects of thinning in a Pinus sylvestris L. stand on foliar water relations of Fagus sylvatica L. seedlings, planted within the pinewood

Journal

TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 358-364

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s004680100109

Keywords

Fagus sylvatica; water relations; drought; southernmost populations; pressure-volume curves

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Planting of beech in old Scots pine plantations, could facilitate the extension of adjoining small natural populations of beech in the centre of the Iberian Peninsula. To be successful the survival and growth of seedlings after outplanting must be compatible with microclimatic conditions within thinned pine woods. The present paper deals with water relations in beech seedlings following the variation of available radiation and water as a result of thinning. The seedlings were established under an old Scots pine plantation. After pine felling, four situations were generated in terms of radiation. Hemispherical photographs were taken, and global relative irradiance was calculated for every treatment. During two growing seasons predawn water potential (Psi (pd)) was measured and leaf water parameters were derived from P-V curves. The Psi (pd) diminished through the season in all four situations, and the highest values, were found when pine density was lowest. Osmotic potential at turgor lost (Psi pi (0)) was higher in early summer. A negative relationship was-found between osmotic potential at full turgor (Psi (pi full)) and symplast solute content on a dry weight basis (N-s). Under the lowest irradiance (unthinned pine trees), Psi (pi full) and Psi (pi0) were the highest and the bulk modulus of elasticity (epsilon (max)) the lowest; epsilon (max) decreased in response to the lowest Psi (pd) measured at the end of summer 1998. It was followed by a reduction in the symplastic relative water content and N-s, irrespective of the irradiance. Osmotic adjustment, as a drought tolerance mechanism, was limited under shade conditions (unthinned pine trees), restricting the acclimation of beech seedlings to drought. Therefore, the presence of overstory, necessary for a successful implantation, should not be extended for too many years because of the risk of negative effects on growth and survival, particularly after frequent dry summers.

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