Abstract

In Valais, an inner-Alpine dry valley in Switzerland, low-elevation Scots pine ( Pinus sylvestris L.) forests are changing. While pine shows high mortality rates, deciduous species, in particular pubescent oak ( Quercus pubescens Willd.), are becoming more abundant. We hypothesise that increasing drought and the species-specific drought tolerance are key factors in these processes. In this study, the growth reaction to drought years of pine and oak growing at a xeric site in Valais was analysed using dendrochronological and wood anatomical methods. Congruent with theoretical expectations, the tree-ring widths of both species, the mean lumen area of earlywood vessels in oak and the number of tracheids in a radial row in pine decreased in response to dry conditions. However, both species also showed reactions deviating from those known from mesic sites: In oak, the mean lumen area of latewood vessels increased in drought years. In pine, in the driest year of the period (1976), the mean radial diameter increased in latewood and decreased only slightly in earlywood. These results emphasises that the process of wood formation and cell functionality at xeric sites is not completely understood yet. Both species seem to have difficulties to adapt the size of their water-conducting cells to strongly reduced water availability in drought years. Additionally, the cell number is strongly reduced. Thus it remains unclear if both species can maintain sufficient water transport under increasingly dry conditions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call