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Diameter growth: can live trees decrease?
Author(s) -
Guillermo Martínez Pastur,
María Vanessa Lencinas,
Juan Manuel Cellini,
Ignacio A. Mundo
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
forestry an international journal of forest research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1464-3626
pISSN - 0015-752X
DOI - 10.1093/forestry/cpl047
Subject(s) - perennial plant , growth rate , thinning , environmental science , annual growth % , growing season , biology , ecology , atmospheric sciences , horticulture , mathematics , physics , geometry
Summary Growth refers to an increase in dimensions with time and is implicit in the expected continual increase in tree dimensions. Tree diameters, however, could decrease during the growing season due to water depletion. Annual negative growth measurements are usually attributed to human error and not to other physiological or physical processes. Although seasonal and diurnal fl uctuations of diameter have been well documented, perennial decrement of diameter has not been the focus of physiological research. The aim of this work was to analyse the potential causes of decrease in annual diameter growth related to tree mortality due to self-thinning in Nothofagus pumilio forests and to quantify the variations in water depletion of the tree trunks. Some trees did present negative annual diameter increments associated with a water content decrease in the trunks (77 per cent in live trees compared with 56 per cent in recently dead individuals), which produced a contraction (more than 8 per cent of the initial diameter) in the wood and the bark. Trees could survive during 2 – 5 growth seasons with continual decreases in their diameters (14 per cent, standard error 5 per cent of the trees in the studied stand) until the water content reached a limit where mortality resulted. Therefore, the occurrence of data showing a diameter decrease in successive forest inventories may be due to physiological and physical processes in the natural dynamics of the stand, and not exclusively be explained away as the results of human measurement errors.

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