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Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood

CONTEXT: Wood specific gravity is a key element in tropical forest ecology. It integrates many aspects of tree mechanical properties and functioning and is an important predictor of tree biomass. Wood specific gravity varies widely among and within species and also within individual trees. Notably,...

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Autores principales: Bastin, Jean-François, Fayolle, Adeline, Tarelkin, Yegor, Van den Bulcke, Jan, de Haulleville, Thales, Mortier, Frederic, Beeckman, Hans, Van Acker, Joris, Serckx, Adeline, Bogaert, Jan, De Cannière, Charles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4640573/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26555144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142146
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author Bastin, Jean-François
Fayolle, Adeline
Tarelkin, Yegor
Van den Bulcke, Jan
de Haulleville, Thales
Mortier, Frederic
Beeckman, Hans
Van Acker, Joris
Serckx, Adeline
Bogaert, Jan
De Cannière, Charles
author_facet Bastin, Jean-François
Fayolle, Adeline
Tarelkin, Yegor
Van den Bulcke, Jan
de Haulleville, Thales
Mortier, Frederic
Beeckman, Hans
Van Acker, Joris
Serckx, Adeline
Bogaert, Jan
De Cannière, Charles
author_sort Bastin, Jean-François
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Wood specific gravity is a key element in tropical forest ecology. It integrates many aspects of tree mechanical properties and functioning and is an important predictor of tree biomass. Wood specific gravity varies widely among and within species and also within individual trees. Notably, contrasted patterns of radial variation of wood specific gravity have been demonstrated and related to regeneration guilds (light demanding vs. shade-bearing). However, although being repeatedly invoked as a potential source of error when estimating the biomass of trees, both intraspecific and radial variations remain little studied. In this study we characterized detailed pith-to-bark wood specific gravity profiles among contrasted species prominently contributing to the biomass of the forest, i.e., the dominant species, and we quantified the consequences of such variations on the biomass. METHODS: Radial profiles of wood density at 8% moisture content were compiled for 14 dominant species in the Democratic Republic of Congo, adapting a unique 3D X-ray scanning technique at very high spatial resolution on core samples. Mean wood density estimates were validated by water displacement measurements. Wood density profiles were converted to wood specific gravity and linear mixed models were used to decompose the radial variance. Potential errors in biomass estimation were assessed by comparing the biomass estimated from the wood specific gravity measured from pith-to-bark profiles, from global repositories, and from partial information (outer wood or inner wood). RESULTS: Wood specific gravity profiles from pith-to-bark presented positive, neutral and negative trends. Positive trends mainly characterized light-demanding species, increasing up to 1.8 g.cm(-3) per meter for Piptadeniastrum africanum, and negative trends characterized shade-bearing species, decreasing up to 1 g.cm(-3) per meter for Strombosia pustulata. The linear mixed model showed the greater part of wood specific gravity variance was explained by species only (45%) followed by a redundant part between species and regeneration guilds (36%). Despite substantial variation in wood specific gravity profiles among species and regeneration guilds, we found that values from the outer wood were strongly correlated to values from the whole profile, without any significant bias. In addition, we found that wood specific gravity from the DRYAD global repository may strongly differ depending on the species (up to 40% for Dialium pachyphyllum). MAIN CONCLUSION: Therefore, when estimating forest biomass in specific sites, we recommend the systematic collection of outer wood samples on dominant species. This should prevent the main errors in biomass estimations resulting from wood specific gravity and allow for the collection of new information to explore the intraspecific variation of mechanical properties of trees.
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spelling pubmed-46405732015-11-13 Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood Bastin, Jean-François Fayolle, Adeline Tarelkin, Yegor Van den Bulcke, Jan de Haulleville, Thales Mortier, Frederic Beeckman, Hans Van Acker, Joris Serckx, Adeline Bogaert, Jan De Cannière, Charles PLoS One Research Article CONTEXT: Wood specific gravity is a key element in tropical forest ecology. It integrates many aspects of tree mechanical properties and functioning and is an important predictor of tree biomass. Wood specific gravity varies widely among and within species and also within individual trees. Notably, contrasted patterns of radial variation of wood specific gravity have been demonstrated and related to regeneration guilds (light demanding vs. shade-bearing). However, although being repeatedly invoked as a potential source of error when estimating the biomass of trees, both intraspecific and radial variations remain little studied. In this study we characterized detailed pith-to-bark wood specific gravity profiles among contrasted species prominently contributing to the biomass of the forest, i.e., the dominant species, and we quantified the consequences of such variations on the biomass. METHODS: Radial profiles of wood density at 8% moisture content were compiled for 14 dominant species in the Democratic Republic of Congo, adapting a unique 3D X-ray scanning technique at very high spatial resolution on core samples. Mean wood density estimates were validated by water displacement measurements. Wood density profiles were converted to wood specific gravity and linear mixed models were used to decompose the radial variance. Potential errors in biomass estimation were assessed by comparing the biomass estimated from the wood specific gravity measured from pith-to-bark profiles, from global repositories, and from partial information (outer wood or inner wood). RESULTS: Wood specific gravity profiles from pith-to-bark presented positive, neutral and negative trends. Positive trends mainly characterized light-demanding species, increasing up to 1.8 g.cm(-3) per meter for Piptadeniastrum africanum, and negative trends characterized shade-bearing species, decreasing up to 1 g.cm(-3) per meter for Strombosia pustulata. The linear mixed model showed the greater part of wood specific gravity variance was explained by species only (45%) followed by a redundant part between species and regeneration guilds (36%). Despite substantial variation in wood specific gravity profiles among species and regeneration guilds, we found that values from the outer wood were strongly correlated to values from the whole profile, without any significant bias. In addition, we found that wood specific gravity from the DRYAD global repository may strongly differ depending on the species (up to 40% for Dialium pachyphyllum). MAIN CONCLUSION: Therefore, when estimating forest biomass in specific sites, we recommend the systematic collection of outer wood samples on dominant species. This should prevent the main errors in biomass estimations resulting from wood specific gravity and allow for the collection of new information to explore the intraspecific variation of mechanical properties of trees. Public Library of Science 2015-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4640573/ /pubmed/26555144 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142146 Text en © 2015 Bastin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bastin, Jean-François
Fayolle, Adeline
Tarelkin, Yegor
Van den Bulcke, Jan
de Haulleville, Thales
Mortier, Frederic
Beeckman, Hans
Van Acker, Joris
Serckx, Adeline
Bogaert, Jan
De Cannière, Charles
Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title_full Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title_fullStr Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title_full_unstemmed Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title_short Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood
title_sort wood specific gravity variations and biomass of central african tree species: the simple choice of the outer wood
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4640573/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26555144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142146
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