Abstract

We investigated the relationship between the δ13C signal in current-year and 1-year-old needle bulk material, starch extracts, and early- or late-wood in mature spruce trees (Picea abies) to identify the modifying influence of climatic conditions on the different δ13C signals. Seasonal patterns of δ13C were determined in total bulk needle material from 1998 to 2000, and in acid soluble starch extracts in 1999 and 2000, and δ13C values of early- and late-wood were measured for the years 1991-2000. δ13C of bulk needle material was most enriched in spring with a trend towards depletion in the course of the season. Current-year needles showed a more distinct seasonal pattern in δ13C compared to 1-year-old needles. Seasonal trends in bulk material and starch were similar, but the highly enriched signal in spring could not be fully explained by the influence of the δ13C values of starch (weighted with the corresponding starch amounts). δ13C of starch in 1-year-old needles, and to a lesser extent of current-year needles, correlated with δ13C of early-wood, indicating a transfer of the isotopic signal. In addition, early-wood δ13C corresponded weakly to winter precipitation. In the summer, δ13C of total bulk needle material and starch showed no relation to the late-wood δ13C signature. Late-wood δ13C, however, related to global radiation, relative humidity and temperature, with more enriched values corresponding to warmer and drier conditions. We conclude that the signature of early-wood is determined more by biochemical fractionation, e.g. during starch formation, than by climatic conditions, which exert only a minor influence and are reflected in the isotopic signal of late-wood.

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