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Zastosuj identyfikator do podlinkowania lub zacytowania tej pozycji: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/12931
Tytuł: No systematic effects of sampling direction on climate-growth relationships in a large-scale, multi-species tree-ring data set
Autor: Guta, Urs
Árvai, Mátyás
Bijak, Szymon
Camarero, J. Julio
Cedro, Anna
Cruz-García, Roberto
Garamszegi, Balázs
Hacket-Pain, Andrew
Hevia, Andrea
Huang, Weiwei
Isaac-Renton, Miriam
Kaczka, Ryszard
Kazimirović, Marko
Kędziora, Wojciech
Kern, Zoltán
Klisz, Marcin
Kolář, Tomáš
Körner, Michael
Kuznetsova, Veronica
Montwé, David
Petritan, Any Mary
Petritan, Ion Catalin
Plavcová, Lenka
Rehschuh, Romy
Rocha, Eva
Rybníček, Michal
Sánchez-Salguero, Raúl
Schröder, Jens
Schwab, Niels
Stajić, Branko
Tomusiak, Robert
Wilmking, Martin
Sass-Klaassen, Ute
Buras, Allan
Słowa kluczowe: Tree-rings; Directional growth; Climate signal; Dendro-provenancing; Principal Component Gradient Analysis; Correlation analysis
Data wydania: 2019
Źródło: Dendrochronologia, Vol. 57 (2019) art. no 125624
Abstrakt: Ring-width series are important for diverse fields of research such as the study of past climate, forest ecology, forest genetics, and the determination of origin (dendro-provenancing) or dating of archaeological objects. Recent research suggests diverging climate-growth relationships in tree-rings due to the cardinal direction of extracting the tree cores (i.e. direction-specific effect). This presents an understudied source of bias that potentially affects many data sets in tree-ring research. In this study, we investigated possible direction-specific growth variability based on an international (10 countries), multi-species (8 species) tree-ring width network encompassing 22 sites. To estimate the effect of direction-specific growth variability on climate-growth relationships, we applied a combination of three methods: An analysis of signal strength differences, a Principal Component Gradient Analysis and a test on the direction-specific differences in correlations between indexed ring-widths series and climate variables. We found no evidence for systematic direction-specific effects on tree radial growth variability in high-pass filtered ring-width series. In addition, direction-specific growth showed only marginal effects on climate-growth correlations. These findings therefore indicate that there is no consistent bias caused by coring direction in data sets used for diverse dendrochronological applications on relatively mesic sites within forests in flat terrain, as were studied here. However, in extremely dry, warm or cold environments, or on steep slopes, and for different life-forms such as shrubs, further research is advisable.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/12931
DOI: 10.1016/j.dendro.2019.125624
ISSN: 1125-7865
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