17 resultados para PHENOLOGY


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En el presente trabajo se ha llevado a cabo un estudio de las limitaciones climaticas del crecimiento secundario de Pinus sylvestris L. en tres zonas de Catalunya. Para ello se han establecido 10 cronologias en otras tantas localidades, de las que 6 corresponden al Prepirineo, 2 al Montseny y 2 a Prades. La metodologia utilizada para poner de manifiesto las relaciones clima- crecimiento ha sido el análisis de regresión múltiple en componentes principales, obteniéndose asi las funciones respuesta. Los resultados confirmaron la hipotesis de que esta especie, incluso en la zona del Prepirineo, se ve influenciada por el estrés hídric0 durante la estación de crecimiento y aunque existe una respuesta similar en las tres zonas de estudio, también se producen diferencias. El efecto de inercia o el retardo con que las especies responden a 10s estímulos climaticos se ha puesto de manifiesto al presentar, alguno de 10s factores climaticos, coeficientes significativos en periodos anteriores a la estación actual de crecimiento. Los resultados son comentados desde la ecofisiologia de esta especie, comparándolos con 10s obtenidos por otros autores en el norte de su distribución geográfica. Finalmente se hace referencia a la estrategia adaptativa de P. sylvestris, considerada una especie pionera

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A seasonal period of water deficit characterizes tropical dry forests (TDFs). There, sympatric tree species exhibit a diversity of growth rates, functional traits, and responses to drought, suggesting that each species may possess different strategies to grow under different conditions of water availability. The evaluation of the long-term growth responses to changes in the soil water balance should provide an understanding of how and when coexisting tree species respond to water deficit in TDFs. Furthermore, such differential growth responses may be linked to functional traits related to water storage and conductance. We used dendrochronology and climate data to retrospectively assess how the radial growth of seven coexisting deciduous tree species responded to the seasonal soil water balance in a Bolivian TDF. Linear mixed-effects models were used to quantify the relationships between basal area increment and seasonal water balance. We related these relationships with wood density and sapwood production to assess if they affect the growth responses to climate. The growth of all species responded positively to water balance during the wet season, but such responses differed among species as a function of their wood density. For instance, species with a strong growth response to water availability averaged a low wood density which may facilitate the storage of water in the stem. By contrast, species with very dense wood were those whose growth was less sensitive to water availability. Coexisting tree species thus show differential growth responses to changes in soil water balance during the wet season. Our findings also provide a link between wood density, a trait related to the ability of trees to store water in the stem, and wood formation in response to water availability.