Title
Growth-ring boundaries of tropical tree species: Aiding delimitation by long histological sections and wood density profiles
Date Issued
01 October 2021
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Quintilhan M.T.
Santini L.
Ortega Rodriguez D.R.
Guillemot J.
Cesilio G.H.M.
Nouvellon Y.
Tomazello-Filho M.
Universidade de São Paulo
Abstract
Recent methodological advances have opened new perspectives for tropical dendrochonological studies by facilitating the visualization, delimitation, and analyses of tree-rings. One of those improvements was brought by X-ray densitometry, which allows building radial wood density profiles at microscopic scale. Furthermore, recent methods allow for cutting long histological sections to study anatomical variations along the entire radius of trees. These techniques have mainly been applied to low wood-density species from temperate and Mediterranean regions, with only limited applications in the tropics. Here we provide an improved protocol that allows for obtaining long histological sections of tropical woods, apply it to six species with varying wood densities 0.45−0.85 g cm−3 (Eucalyptus grandis, Tectona grandis, Acacia mangium, Cedrela fissilis, Hymenaea courbaril, and Copaifera duckei), and explore potential applications for tree-ring analyses. We provide instructions on core-microtome knife adjustments, procedures for softening and sectioning long histological samples of high wood-density species. We also present a multi-proxy approach that combines X-ray density profiles with the histological sections that improve the characterization and distinction of the various and complex tropical growth rings anatomical markers (fibre zone, marginal parenchyma, and ring porosity). This multi-proxy approach also opens the door for obtaining quantitative anatomy and physical parameters of tropical species with (intra-annual resolution. Our proposed approach is thus not only an additional tool to improve ring-boundary delimitation of tropical species, but it also paves the way to more innovative, borderline approaches in tropical dendrochronology.
Volume
69
OCDE Knowledge area
Investigación climática
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85114823987
Source
Dendrochronologia
ISSN of the container
11257865
Sponsor(s)
We thank the Laboratory of Wood Anatomy, Tree-Ring and X-ray Densitometry (LAIM) of the Department of Forest Sciences of Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture (ESALQ) (FAPESP project: 2009/53951-7), and the Itatinga Experimental Station of Forest Sciences. We acknowledge support from the EUCFLUX project. Also acknowledged are Francisco de Figueiredo, Pedro Vieira, Júlia Gil and Alinne Santos for their help and for providing some of the material used in this work. This research was supported by the Post-Graduate Program of Forest Resources (ESALQ-USP, Brazil), CAPES Brazil (Coordenacão de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior do Governo do Brasil, Finance Code 001) and FAPESP grants 2019/07576-1, 2018/22914-8. We acknowledge support from the IN-SYLVA French network and the SOERE F-ORE-T. We thank Peter Groenendijk for the textual revision of the manuscript and to the other reviewers of the journal.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus