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Phenology of Woody Species: a Review
Author(s) -
Humberto González Rodríguez,
Ratikanta Maiti,
Narayan Chandra Sarkar
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of bio-resource and stress management/international journal of bio-resource and stress management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0976-4038
pISSN - 0976-3988
DOI - 10.5958/0976-4038.2014.00595.8
Subject(s) - phenology , evergreen , temperate climate , precipitation , climate change , growing season , ecology , subtropics , global warming , population , biology , environmental science , geography , agronomy , demography , sociology , meteorology
An attempt has been made to synthesize a brief account on research advances on various phases of phenology. Climate has positive impact on the timing of phenology; cold-air\uddrainage may influence the start of leaf growth, however leaf phenology in tropical evergreen forests is not determined by the seasonality of precipitation. Climate warming in late winter and spring may enhance sensitivity of the growing season’s spatial response due to the relationship of beginning date to temperature. Elevated temperature strongly influences greater in C3 plants than in C4 plants but the disadvantages of warming may be considerably attenuated by elevated CO2, especially for C3 grasses. Species with high wood densities can able to store only limited quantities of water in their trunks; leaf fall in these species occurred during the dry season. Flowering\udphenology may be changing faster and precipitation may play a more important role in semi-arid grasslands than in humid-temperate systems. Peak flowering and fruiting are dependent on seasons for both endemic and non-endemic species. Population sensitivity to global warming might be stable for a given species, in spite of its possible local adaptation. It might be possible for ecologists to establish comprehensive networks for long-term monitoring of potential photosynthetic capacity from regional to global scales by linking satellite-based programme. Use of satellite-derived metrics,such as VARI, may be used for evaluating the spatial patterns and temporal dynamics\udof species composition across broad geographic regions

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