Journal article

The number of days on which increment occurs is the primary determinant of annual ring width in Callitris intratropica

DM Drew, AE Richards, GD Cook, GM Downes, W Gill, PJ Baker

Trees Structure and Function | Published : 2014

Abstract

Key message: The number of days on which a measureable increment occurred, and the average rate of stem growth, rather than the overall duration of the wet season, were the main determinants of ring width in young Callitris intratropica trees. These effects were amplified by competition. Dendroclimatology of tropical tree species is an important tool for understanding past climatic variability at low latitudes where long-term weather records are often absent. Despite the growing number of published tropical tree-ring chronologies, however, still little is known of the factors that control annual ring formation in tropical tree species. In this paper we used an endemic Australian conifer, Cal..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

Thank you to Robert Eager and Jon Schatz based at the Tropical Ecosystem Research Centre in Darwin for help with setting up the instrumentation. Thanks also to Chris Beadle, Jacqui England and anonymous reviewers for many helpful comments and suggestions. This work was funded in part by the Hermon Slade foundation, and the CSIRO office of the Chief executive.