Continental-scale climatic drivers of growth ring variability in an Australian conifer

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Date
2011-10-01
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Publisher
Springer
Abstract
Callitris is Australia's most successful and drought tolerant conifer genus. Callitris species are distributed across a huge geographical range from rainforest to arid zones, and hence they provide a rare opportunity to view plant growth trends across the continent. Here, we make a continental-scale examination of how climate influences basal diameter growth in Callitris. We sampled a total of five species but focused effort (23 of 28 samples) on the most widespread species, C. columellaris. Cores from a total of 23 trees were sampled from 15 sites that spanned a gradient in mean annual rainfall from 225 to 2117 mm and mean annual temperature from 11.5 to 28.2 degrees C. Ring production is not annual across much of the distribution of the genus, so C-14-AMS dating was used to establish the frequency of ring production for each core. Ring width, tracheid lumen diameter and number of tracheids per ring were also measured on each core. Ring production was close to annual at mesic sites with reliable alternation of rainfall or temperature regimes but was more erratic elsewhere. For C. columellaris, ring width significantly increased with mean annual rainfall (r(2) = 0.49) as a result of wider and more tracheids per ring. For this species tracheid lumen diameter was correlated with annual rainfall (r(2) = 0.61), with a threefold increase from the driest to the wettest sites, lending support to the hypothesis that conifers growing at drier sites will have narrow lumen diameters to maximise mechanical strength of the xylem. © 2011, Springer. The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com
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Keywords
Australia, Climates, Biological variability, Tree rings, Carbon 14 beams, Calibration
Citation
Bowman, D. M. J. S., Prior, L. D., Tng, D. Y. P., Hua, Q., & Brodribb, T. J. (2011). Continental-scale climatic drivers of growth ring variability in an Australian conifer. Trees-Structure and Function, 25(5), 925-934. doi:10.1007/s00468-011-0567-5
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