Influence of wood density in tree-ring-based annual productivity assessments and its errors in Norway spruce
-
Published:2015-10-29
Issue:20
Volume:12
Page:6205-6217
-
ISSN:1726-4189
-
Container-title:Biogeosciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Bouriaud O.ORCID, Teodosiu M., Kirdyanov A. V., Wirth C.
Abstract
Abstract. Estimations of tree annual biomass increments are used by a variety of studies related to forest productivity or carbon fluxes. Biomass increment estimations can be easily obtained from diameter surveys or historical diameter reconstructions based on tree rings' records. However, the biomass models rely on the assumption that wood density is constant. Converting volume increment into biomass also requires assumptions about the wood density. Wood density has been largely reported to vary both in time and between trees. In Norway spruce, wood density is known to increase with decreasing ring width. This could lead to underestimating the biomass or carbon deposition in bad years. The variations between trees of wood density have never been discussed but could also contribute to deviations. A modelling approach could attenuate these effects but will also generate errors. Here a model of wood density variations in Norway spruce, and an allometric model of volume growth were developed. We accounted for variations in wood density both between years and between trees, based on specific measurements. We compared the effects of neglecting each variation source on the estimations of annual biomass increment. We also assessed the errors of the biomass increment predictions at tree level, and of the annual productivity at plot level. Our results showed a partial compensation of the decrease in ring width in bad years by the increase in wood density. The underestimation of the biomass increment in those years reached 15 %. The errors related to the use of an allometric model of volume growth were modest, around ±15 %. The errors related to variations in wood density were much larger, the biggest component being the inter-tree variability. The errors in plot-level annual biomass productivity reached up to 40 %, with a full account of all the error sources.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference57 articles.
1. Anthoni, P. M., Knohl, A., Rebmann, C., Freibauer, A., Mund, M., Ziegler, W., Kolle, O., and Schulze, E.D.: Forest and agricultural land use dependent CO2 exchange in Thuringia, Germany, Glob. Change Biol., 10, 2005–2019, 2004. 2. Babst, F., Poulter, B., Trouet, V., Tan, K., Neuwirth, B., Wilson, R., Carrer, M., Grabner, M., Tegel, W., Levanic, T., Panayotov, M., Urbinati, M., Bouriaud, O., Ciais, P., and Frank, D.: Site- and species-specific responses of forest growth to climate across the European continent, Glob. Ecol. Biogeogr., 22, 706–717, https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12023, 2013. 3. Babst, F., Bouriaud, O., Papale, D., Gielen, B., Janssens, I.A., Nikinmaa, E., Ibrom, A., Wu, K., Bernhofer, C., Köstner, B., Grünwald, T., and Frank, D.: Above-ground woody carbon sequestration measured from tree rings is coherent with net ecosystem productivity at five eddy-covariance sites, New Phytol., 201, 1289–1303, https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.12589, 2014a. 4. Babst, F., Alexander, M. R., Szejner, P., Bouriaud, O., Klesse, S., Roden, J., Ciais, P., Poulter, B., Frank, D., Moore, J. P., and Trouet, V.: A tree-ring perspective on the terrestrial carbon cycle, Oecologia, 176, 307–322, 2014b. 5. Barford, C. C., Wofsy, S. C., Goulden, M. L., Munger, J. W., Pyle, E. H., Urbanski, S. P., Hutyra L., Saleska S. R., Fitzjarrald D., and Moore, K.: Factors controlling long-and short-term sequestration of atmospheric CO2 in a mid-latitude forest, Science, 294, 1688–1691, 2001.
Cited by
33 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|