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Thinning effectively mitigates the decline of aging Mongolian pine plantations by alleviating drought stress and enhancing plant carbon balance.

Authors :
Duan, Chun-Yang
Li, Ming-Yong
Zhang, Chi
Gong, Xue-Wei
Zhu, Jiao-Jun
Cao, Yu
Wu, De-Dong
Hao, Guang-You
Source :
Environmental & Experimental Botany. Sep2023, Vol. 213, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Intensifying drought around the globe poses strong challenges to the growth and survival of trees, emphasizing the urgency of understanding the physiological mechanisms of drought-induced tree decline and mortality and the necessity of using silvicultural approaches to mitigate drought effects on tree growth. We experimentally explored whether thinning enhances tree growth vigor and drought resilience in early aging Mongolian pine (Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica Litv.) plantations in a water-limited area of Northeast China using dendrochronological methods. Meanwhile, we compared plant hydraulic traits, water relations, and non-structural carbohydrate concentrations between trees growing in the thinned and un-thinned stands with the aim of unraveling the physiological mechanisms underlying the density effects on tree growth performance. The results showed that basal area increments of Mongolian pine trees in the high-density plantations started to decline continuously at tree cambium age of around 15 years over about a decade, while thinning effectively reversed their growth decline. Trees in thinned stands exhibited significantly higher predawn leaf water potentials, higher stem hydraulic conductivities, and larger carbon reserves than trees in un-thinned stands. Although trees growing in high-density stands maintained as low risks of xylem hydraulic dysfunction as trees growing in low-density stands, that was at the cost of substantially reducing tree crown size through branch mortality that unavoidably undermined their carbon balance at the whole-plant level. Consistently, trees growing in the thinned low-density stands showed significantly higher levels of non-structural carbohydrate reserve in stems and enhanced growth resilience to extreme drought than trees growing in the high-density reference stands. Our results suggest that thinning can effectively enhance xylem hydraulic transport efficiency and reduce the risk of carbon imbalance by increasing soil water availability and hence mitigates the early aging of Mongolian pine plantations in water-limited environments. • Thinning improved growth vigor and drought resilience of aging plantations. • Trees exhibited higher hydraulic efficiency and better water status after thinning. • Higher nonstructural carbohydrate content contributed to greater drought resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00988472
Volume :
213
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental & Experimental Botany
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169814500
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envexpbot.2023.105434