Water availability controls <em>Pinus pinaster</em> xylem growth and density: A multi-proxy approach along its environmental range - INRAE - Institut national de recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Agricultural and Forest Meteorology Année : 2018

Water availability controls Pinus pinaster xylem growth and density: A multi-proxy approach along its environmental range

Résumé

Deciphering climatic factors limiting cambial activity is critical to forecast the potential of trees to respond to ongoing climatic change. We explored multiple xylem traits, including tree-ring width, inter-annual micro-density variation and intra-annual density fluctuations (IADF), to unveil the climatic factors constraining cambial activity of a Mediterranean conifer (Pinus pinaster) along a continental-aridity gradient. Secondary growth responded mainly to water availability, explaining as much as 64.7% of earlywood growth variance for earlywood growth. The continuous and non-overlapping timing of the climatic signals of earlywood and late wood growth reflected a continuous water limitation of secondary growth along the growing season. Drought also had an extraordinary impact on minimum (D-min) and maximum (D-max) density, with maximal explained variances reaching 47.4% and 39.1%, respectively. D-min was negatively associated to water availability during the initiation of earlywood formation, whereas D-max responded positively to water availability during two distinct periods: previous winter and the initiation of latewood formation. IADFs in the latewood were quite common along the gradient, occurred in 21-51% of the rings, and responded to episodes of high rainfall and elevated temperature at different phases of latewood formation. Xylem traits identity outperformed site as a driver of climatic signal, revealing the potential of a multi-proxy approach to unveil multiple facets of the xylogenetic cycle. Cambial plasticity, i.e. the ability to adjust the xylogenesis rate and to arrest and resume cambial activity to exploit favorable climatic windows, was critical for Pinus pinaster to thrive within wide climatic envelopes. Nevertheless, the pervasive effect of water availability on all analyzed traits indicates that forthcoming reduced precipitation and increased evapotranspiration, as predicted by climate change models, will negatively impact P. pinaster secondary growth along its whole environmental range.
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Dates et versions

hal-02624323 , version 1 (26-05-2020)

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Alberto Arzac, Vicente Rozas, Philippe Rozenberg, José M. Olano. Water availability controls Pinus pinaster xylem growth and density: A multi-proxy approach along its environmental range. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 2018, 250, pp.171-180. ⟨10.1016/j.agrformet.2017.12.257⟩. ⟨hal-02624323⟩
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