Shining a new light on the classical concepts of carbon-isotope dendrochronology

IF 8.3 1区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES
New Phytologist Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.1111/nph.20258
Thomas Wieloch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Retrospective information about plant ecophysiology and the climate system are key inputs in Earth system and vegetation models. Dendrochronology provides such information with large spatiotemporal coverage, and carbon-isotope analysis across tree-ring series is among the most advanced dendrochronological tools. For the past 70 years, this analysis was performed on whole molecules and, to this day, 13C discrimination during carbon assimilation is invoked to explain isotope variation and associated climate signals. However, recently it was reported that tree-ring glucose exhibits multiple isotope signals at the intramolecular level (see Wieloch et al., 2024). Here, I estimated the signals' contribution to whole-molecule isotope variation and found that downstream processes in leaf and stem metabolism each introduce more variation than carbon assimilation. Moreover, downstream processes introduce most of the climate information. These findings are inconsistent with the classical concepts/practices of carbon-isotope dendrochronology. More importantly, intramolecular tree-ring isotope analysis promises novel insights into forest metabolism and the climate of the past.
碳同位素年代学经典概念的新启示
植物生态生理学和气候系统的回溯信息是地球系统和植被模型的关键输入。树木年代学提供了大时空覆盖范围的此类信息,而对树环系列进行碳同位素分析是最先进的树木年代学工具之一。在过去的 70 年中,这种分析是针对整个分子进行的,而且至今仍在使用碳同化过程中的 13C 鉴别来解释同位素变化和相关的气候信号。然而,最近有报道称,树环葡糖在分子内水平表现出多种同位素信号(见 Wieloch 等人,2024 年)。在此,我估算了这些信号对全分子同位素变化的贡献,发现叶片和茎代谢的下游过程比碳同化带来的变化更大。此外,下游过程引入了大部分气候信息。这些发现与碳同位素年代学的经典概念/实践不一致。更重要的是,分子内树轮同位素分析有望为了解森林新陈代谢和过去的气候提供新的视角。
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来源期刊
New Phytologist
New Phytologist 生物-植物科学
自引率
5.30%
发文量
728
期刊介绍: New Phytologist is an international electronic journal published 24 times a year. It is owned by the New Phytologist Foundation, a non-profit-making charitable organization dedicated to promoting plant science. The journal publishes excellent, novel, rigorous, and timely research and scholarship in plant science and its applications. The articles cover topics in five sections: Physiology & Development, Environment, Interaction, Evolution, and Transformative Plant Biotechnology. These sections encompass intracellular processes, global environmental change, and encourage cross-disciplinary approaches. The journal recognizes the use of techniques from molecular and cell biology, functional genomics, modeling, and system-based approaches in plant science. Abstracting and Indexing Information for New Phytologist includes Academic Search, AgBiotech News & Information, Agroforestry Abstracts, Biochemistry & Biophysics Citation Index, Botanical Pesticides, CAB Abstracts®, Environment Index, Global Health, and Plant Breeding Abstracts, and others.
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