info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Characterizing growth rings in the trees of Perú: A wood anatomical overview for potential applications in dendroecological-related fields
Fecha
2020-08Registro en:
Marcelo Peña, José Luis; Roig Junent, Fidel Alejandro; Goodwin, Zoë A.; Tomazello Filho, Mario; Characterizing growth rings in the trees of Perú: A wood anatomical overview for potential applications in dendroecological-related fields; Elsevier Gmbh, Urban & Fischer Verlag; Dendrochronologia; 62; 8-2020; 1-13
1125-7865
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Marcelo Peña, José Luis
Roig Junent, Fidel Alejandro
Goodwin, Zoë A.
Tomazello Filho, Mario
Resumen
Sustainable forestry requires accurate ecological information such as species composition, growth rates and recruitment dynamics. Tree growth rates are usually obtained through long-term periodic re-measurements of individual trees or through the analysis of tree growth rings in stem cross sections. However, tree growth ring analysis was traditionally thought to be only possible in biomes with strong seasonality such as those found in high latitude temperate regions. A lack of data on the occurrence and characteristics of tree rings in tropical trees may be due to a lack of investigations. Here we characterise the growth rings of 183 tree species from seven forest types across an altitudinal gradient in northern and central Perú at macro- and microscopic levels. A correspondence analysis showed an association between phylogenetic relatedness and the level of distinctiveness in the growth rings. Deciduous species of seasonally dry tropical forests were associated with distinct growth rings and mainly delimited by marginal parenchyma, while indistinct growth rings were associated with evergreen trees from lowland Amazonian and pre-montane wet forests. Additionally, for the first time the presence of growth ring boundaries defined by marginal phloem is reported in two tropical tree species, Gallesia integrifolia (Spreng.) Harms and Vochysia mapirensis Rusby. This contribution represents the most exhaustive record to date of the occurrence and anatomy of growth rings in trees of the Peruvian tropics, which can be used to inform future dendrochronological studies.