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Tree height strongly affects estimates of water-use efficiency responses to climate and CO2 using isotopes.


ABSTRACT: Various studies report substantial increases in intrinsic water-use efficiency (W i ), estimated using carbon isotopes in tree rings, suggesting trees are gaining increasingly more carbon per unit water lost due to increases in atmospheric CO2. Usually, reconstructions do not, however, correct for the effect of intrinsic developmental changes in W i as trees grow larger. Here we show, by comparing W i across varying tree sizes at one CO2 level, that ignoring such developmental effects can severely affect inferences of trees' W i . W i doubled or even tripled over a trees' lifespan in three broadleaf species due to changes in tree height and light availability alone, and there are also weak trends for Pine trees. Developmental trends in broadleaf species are as large as the trends previously assigned to CO2 and climate. Credible future tree ring isotope studies require explicit accounting for species-specific developmental effects before CO2 and climate effects are inferred.Intrinsic water-use efficiency (W i ) reconstructions using tree rings often disregard developmental changes in W i as trees age. Here, the authors compare W i across varying tree sizes at a fixed CO2 level and show that ignoring developmental changes impacts conclusions on trees' W i responses to CO2 or climate.

SUBMITTER: Brienen RJW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5561090 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Tree height strongly affects estimates of water-use efficiency responses to climate and CO<sub>2</sub> using isotopes.

Brienen R J W RJW   Gloor E E   Clerici S S   Newton R R   Arppe L L   Boom A A   Bottrell S S   Callaghan M M   Heaton T T   Helama S S   Helle G G   Leng M J MJ   Mielikäinen K K   Oinonen M M   Timonen M M  

Nature communications 20170818 1


Various studies report substantial increases in intrinsic water-use efficiency (W <sub>i</sub> ), estimated using carbon isotopes in tree rings, suggesting trees are gaining increasingly more carbon per unit water lost due to increases in atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub>. Usually, reconstructions do not, however, correct for the effect of intrinsic developmental changes in W <sub>i</sub> as trees grow larger. Here we show, by comparing W <sub>i</sub> across varying tree sizes at one CO<sub>2</sub> lev  ...[more]

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