4.8 Article

Retrospective analysis of wood anatomical traits and tree-ring isotopes suggests site-specific mechanisms triggering Araucaria araucana drought-induced dieback

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 24, 页码 6394-6408

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15881

关键词

Argentina; cell-wall thickness; Chile; climate change; drought; growth decline; hydraulic conductivity; lumen area; tree mortality; water-use efficiency

资金

  1. Rufford Foundation [23677-1]

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The study revealed that Northern Patagonia experienced severe drought from 2010 to 2018, leading to growth decline and dieback of many trees. The specific roles of hydraulic failure and carbon starvation, the two major mechanisms driving tree dieback, remain unclear in this dry region. Examination of wood traits and isotopes in the iconic conifer Araucaria araucana showed that declining trees had lower hydraulic conductivity and a long-lasting process of hydraulic deterioration compared to nondeclining trees, suggesting a risk of long-term hydraulic failure and carbon starvation.
In 2010-2018, Northern Patagonia featured the longest severe drought of the last millennium. This extreme dry spell triggered widespread growth decline and forest dieback. Nonetheless, the roles played by the two major mechanisms driving dieback, hydraulic failure and carbon starvation, are still not clear and understudied in this seasonally dry region. Here, for the 1800-2017 period, we apply a retrospective analysis of radial growth, wood anatomical traits (lumen area, cell-wall thickness) and delta C-13 and delta O-18 stable isotopes to assess dieback causes of the iconic conifer Araucaria araucana. We selected three stands where declining (defoliated) and nondeclining (not defoliated) trees coexisted along a precipitation gradient from the warm-dry Coastal Range to the cool-wet Andes. At all sites declining trees showed lower radial growth and lower theoretical hydraulic conductivity, suggesting a long-lasting process of hydraulic deterioration in their water transport system compared to nondeclining, coexisting trees. Wood anatomical traits evidenced that this divergence between declining and nondeclining trees started at least seven decades before canopy dieback. In the drier stands, declining trees showed higher water-use efficiency (WUE) throughout the whole period, which we attributed to early stomatal closure, suggesting a greater carbon starvation risk consistent with thinner cell walls. In the wettest stand, we found the opposite pattern. Here, a reduction in WUE coupled with thicker cell walls suggested increased carbon assimilation rates and exposure to drought-induced hydraulic failure. The delta O-18 values indicated different strategies of gas exchange between sites, which are likely a consequence of microsite conditions and water sources. Multiproxy, retrospective quantifications of xylem anatomical traits and tree-ring isotopes provide a robust tool to identify and forecast, which stands or trees will show dieback or, on the contrary, which will likely withstand and be more resilient to future hotter droughts.

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