Abstract

Plant architecture is shaped by endogenous growth processes interacting with the local environment. The current study investigated crown development in young black alder trees, assessing the effects of local light conditions and branch height on individual bud mass and contents. In addition, we examined the characteristics of parent shoots [the cross-sectional area (CSA) of stem and total leaf area, shoot length, the number of nodes, the number and total mass of buds per shoot] and leaf-stem as well as bud-stem allometry, as several recent studies link bud development to hydraulic architecture. We sampled shoots from top branches and two lower-crown locations: one subjected to deep shade and the other resembling the upper branches in light availability. Sampling was carried out three times between mid-July and late October, spanning from the early stages of bud growth to dormancy. Individual bud mass and shoot characteristics varied in response to light conditions, whereas leaf-stem allometry depended on branch height, most likely compensating for the increasing length of hydraulic pathways. Despite the differences in individual bud mass, the number of preformed leaves varied little across the crown, indicating that the plasticity in shoot characteristics was mainly achieved by neoformation. The relationship between total bud mass and stem CSA scaled similarly across crown locations. However, scaling slopes gradually decreased throughout the sampling period, driven by bud rather than by stem growth. This suggests that the allometry of total bud mass and CSA of stem is regulated locally, instead of resulting from crown-level processes.

Highlights

  • Tree crowns develop by forming semi-autonomous repeated elements: buds, metamers, shoots and branches (White 1979; Maillette 1982a, b; Barthelemy and Caraglio 2007; Kawamura 2010)

  • The current study investigated crown development in young black alder trees, assessing the effects of local light conditions and branch height on individual bud mass and contents

  • Individual bud mass and shoot characteristics varied in response to light conditions, whereas leaf–stem allometry depended on branch height, most likely compensating for the increasing length of hydraulic pathways

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Summary

Introduction

Tree crowns develop by forming semi-autonomous repeated elements: buds, metamers, shoots and branches (White 1979; Maillette 1982a, b; Barthelemy and Caraglio 2007; Kawamura 2010). Contrasting light conditions contribute to determining the differing rates of bud production, mortality and the characteristics of the future shoots in the upper versus lower crown (Jones and Harper 1987a, b; Eschrich et al 1989; Kimura et al 1998; Uemura et al 2000; Kull and Tulva 2002)

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