Author:
Bondietti E. A.,Baes III C. F.,McLaughlin S. B.
Abstract
Concentration ratios of aluminum to calcium, magnesium, and other divalent cations in increment cores obtained from red spruce and eastern hemlock trees growing in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee and North Carolina have increased in an unprecedented manner during the last 15–40 years. These trends, which also occur in other trees growing in eastern North America and Germany may reflect the mobilization of exchangeable aluminum by [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] deposition. The soil chemistry and plant physiology bases for this hypothesis are presented. Many of the spruce and hemlock cores from the Great Smoky Mountains also showed an inverse relationship between radial growth and aluminium:alcium ratios in the wood. Changes in the availability of soil cations, as recorded in tree rings, may provide an ecosystem-level method of evaluating the historical response of forest soils to atmospheric deposition.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
137 articles.
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