Cutting tree rings into time slices: how intra-annual dynamics of wood formation help decipher the space-for-time conversion
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Wiley
Abstract
Tree-ring anatomy, microdensity and isotope records provide valuable intra-annual information. However, extracting signals at that scale is challenged by the complexity of xylogenesis, where two major processes – cell enlargement and wall thickening – occur at different times and rates.
We characterized the space-for-time association in the tree rings of three conifer species by examining the duration, overlapping, inter-tree synchronicity and interannual stability during cell enlargement and wall thickening across regular tree-ring sectors (portions of equal tangential width).
The number of cells and cell differentiation rates determined the duration of sector formation, which augmented more rapidly throughout the ring for wall thickening than for enlargement. Increasing the number of sectors above c. 15 had a limited effect on improving time resolution because consecutive sector formation overlapped greatly in time, especially in narrow rings and during wall thickening. Increasing the number of sectors also resulted in lower synchronicity and stability of intermediate-sector enlargement, whereas all sectors showed high synchronicity and stability during wall thickening.
Increasing the number of sectors had a stronger effect on enhancing time-series resolution for enlargement- than for wall-thickening-related traits, which would nevertheless produce more reliable intra-annual chronologies as a result of the more similar calendars across trees and years in wall thickening
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New Phytologist (2022) 233: 1520–1534. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.17869
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https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.17869Sponsors
The authors thank: H. Cuny for collecting, preparing and observing wood formation and anatomy samples; SILVATECH (Silvatech, INRAE, 2018. Structural and functional analysis of tree and wood facility, doi: 10.15454/1.5572400113627854E12) from UMR 1434 SILVA; 1136 IAM, 1138 BEF and 4370 EA LERMAB from the research center INRAE Grand-Est Nancy for its contribution to wood sample collection (E. Cornu, E. Farré, C. Freyburger, P. Gelhaye, and A. Mercanti) and preparation (M. Harroué); and the editor and two referees for their suggestions. This work was supported by a grant overseen by the French National Research Agency (ANR) as part of the ‘Investissements d'Avenir’ program (ANR-11-LABX-0002-01, Laboratory of Excellence ARBRE), and by the program ‘Soutien aux jeunes chercheurs’ (18_GE5_018) funded by the Conseil Régional Grand Est (France). GPL benefited from a Xunta de Galicia–Fulbright fellowship (ED481B2019/108) and is grateful to Xunta de Galicia for the recognition of the Research Competitive Reference Group GI-1809 BIOAPLIC (ED431C 2019/07). LFU was a recipient of an AgreenSkills+ fellowship funded by the EU’s Seventh Framework Program under grant agreement no. FP7-609398 (AgreenSkills+ contract)
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©2021 The Authors. ©2021 New Phytologist Foundation.This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made








