Abstract

Density is an important wood mechanical property and an indicator of xylem architecture and hydraulic conductivity. It can be influenced by forest management and climate. We studied the impact of thinning and climate variables on annual stem radial growth (ring width and ring density, and their earlywood and latewood components) in two contrasting Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) stands in northern Spain (one continental, one Mediterranean). At each site, three thinning regimes (control or T0, removing 20% basal area or T20, and removing 30% or T30) were randomly applied to nine plots per site (three plots per treatment) in 1999. Thinning was repeated at the Mediterranean site in 2009 (increasing thinning intensity in T30 to 40%). Eight trees per plot were cored in spring 2014. Second thinning at the Mediterranean site and first thinning at the continental site generally caused significantly wider ring (RW), earlywood (EW) and latewood (LW) widths, although no differences between T20 and T30/40 were found, supporting in part the common observation that radial growth is enhanced following thinning as competition for water and nutrients is reduced. At the Mediterranean site, values of latewood density (LD) and maximum density (Dmax) relative to pre-thinning conditions were significantly lower in T0 than in T30. However, at the continental site, relative changes of ring density (RD) and LD were significantly higher in T0 than in T20 and T30. Climate significantly affected not only RW but also RD, with significant RD drops during or right after unusually warm-dry years (e.g., 2003, 2011), which were characterized by LD reductions between 5.4 and 8.0%. Such RD decreases were quickly followed by recovery of pre-drought density values. These results indicate trees temporarily reduce LD as a way to enhance hydraulic conductivity during dry summers. However, climate effects on wood density were site-dependent. We also detected that the thinning effect was not intense enough to prevent drought-induced changes in wood density by altering water availability, but it could help to reduce wood properties fluctuations and therefore maintain more homogeneous wood mechanic features.

Highlights

  • Annual tree rings record interactions between trees and environment [1]

  • To better understand the relationships between forest management, environmental factors and wood properties, this study aimed to explore and compare the individual ring characteristics of trees in two Scots pine forests in northern Spain subjected to different climatic conditions for 14 years after different thinning treatments, using scanning X-ray densitometry

  • Moderate or heavy thinning treatments generally enhanced Scots pine radial growth, as the results showed that average ring width values increased significantly in the thinned plots (T20 and T30/40) compared to the unthinned (T0), two thinning events were needed at the Mediterranean site to reach such an effect, whereas at the continental site, one thinning event was enough to cause significant differences among treatments

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Summary

Introduction

Annual tree rings record interactions between trees and environment [1]. In conifers, the anatomical changes of tracheids through the growing season are characterized by the formation of narrower lumen areas, thicker walls and more dense wood along the gradual transition from earlywood to latewood [2].Variation in wood characteristics (e.g., tracheid lumen area, wood density, or latewood percentage)Forests 2018, 9, 4; doi:10.3390/f9010004 www.mdpi.com/journal/forestsForests 2018, 9, 4 within and between trees is affected by a number of factors including stand structure, tree age, environmental conditions and genetics [3,4].Physiological drivers of wood-density changes between and within tree rings are related to cambial activity and depend on factors modulating the activity of this meristem, including tree size and age, and seasonality in climate conditions [5]. Annual tree rings record interactions between trees and environment [1]. The anatomical changes of tracheids through the growing season are characterized by the formation of narrower lumen areas, thicker walls and more dense wood along the gradual transition from earlywood to latewood [2]. Variation in wood characteristics (e.g., tracheid lumen area, wood density, or latewood percentage). Forests 2018, 9, 4 within and between trees is affected by a number of factors including stand structure, tree age, environmental conditions and genetics [3,4]. Physiological drivers of wood-density changes between and within tree rings are related to cambial activity and depend on factors modulating the activity of this meristem, including tree size and age, and seasonality in climate conditions [5]. Wood density is sensitive to environmental changes, such as water availability, drought stress and temperature fluctuations [6,7].

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