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Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)

Boreal tree species are excellent tools for studying tolerance to climate change. Bud phenology is a trait, which is highly sensitive to environmental fluctuations and thus useful for climate change investigations. However, experimental studies of bud phenology under simulated climate change outdoor...

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Autores principales: Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan, Randriamanana, Tendry, Chenhao, Cao, Virjamo, Virpi, Nybakken, Line, Julkunen‐Tiitto, Riitta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5632631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29043051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3352
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author Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan
Randriamanana, Tendry
Chenhao, Cao
Virjamo, Virpi
Nybakken, Line
Julkunen‐Tiitto, Riitta
author_facet Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan
Randriamanana, Tendry
Chenhao, Cao
Virjamo, Virpi
Nybakken, Line
Julkunen‐Tiitto, Riitta
author_sort Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan
collection PubMed
description Boreal tree species are excellent tools for studying tolerance to climate change. Bud phenology is a trait, which is highly sensitive to environmental fluctuations and thus useful for climate change investigations. However, experimental studies of bud phenology under simulated climate change outdoors are deficient. We conducted a multifactorial field experiment with single (T, UVA, UVB) and combined treatments (UVA+T, UVB+T) of elevated temperature (T, +2°C) and ultraviolet‐B radiation (+30% UVB) in order to examine their impact on both male and female genotypes of aspen (Populus tremula L.). This study focuses on the effect of the treatments in years 2 and 3 after planting (2013, 2014) and follows how bud phenology is adapting in year 4 (2015), when the treatments were discontinued. Moreover, the effect of bud removal was recorded. We found that elevated temperature played a key role in delaying bud set and forcing bud break in intact individuals, as well as slightly delaying bud break in bud‐removed individuals. UVB delayed the bud break in bud‐removed males. In addition, both UVA and UVB interacted with temperature in year 3 and even in year 4, when the treatments were off, but only in male individuals. Axillary bud removal forced both bud break and bud set under combined treatments (UVA+T, UVB+T) and delayed both under individual treatments (T, UVB). In conclusion, male aspens were more responsive to the treatments than females and that effect of elevated temperature and UV radiation on bud set and bud break of aspen is not disappearing over 4‐year study period.
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spelling pubmed-56326312017-10-17 Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L) Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan Randriamanana, Tendry Chenhao, Cao Virjamo, Virpi Nybakken, Line Julkunen‐Tiitto, Riitta Ecol Evol Original Research Boreal tree species are excellent tools for studying tolerance to climate change. Bud phenology is a trait, which is highly sensitive to environmental fluctuations and thus useful for climate change investigations. However, experimental studies of bud phenology under simulated climate change outdoors are deficient. We conducted a multifactorial field experiment with single (T, UVA, UVB) and combined treatments (UVA+T, UVB+T) of elevated temperature (T, +2°C) and ultraviolet‐B radiation (+30% UVB) in order to examine their impact on both male and female genotypes of aspen (Populus tremula L.). This study focuses on the effect of the treatments in years 2 and 3 after planting (2013, 2014) and follows how bud phenology is adapting in year 4 (2015), when the treatments were discontinued. Moreover, the effect of bud removal was recorded. We found that elevated temperature played a key role in delaying bud set and forcing bud break in intact individuals, as well as slightly delaying bud break in bud‐removed individuals. UVB delayed the bud break in bud‐removed males. In addition, both UVA and UVB interacted with temperature in year 3 and even in year 4, when the treatments were off, but only in male individuals. Axillary bud removal forced both bud break and bud set under combined treatments (UVA+T, UVB+T) and delayed both under individual treatments (T, UVB). In conclusion, male aspens were more responsive to the treatments than females and that effect of elevated temperature and UV radiation on bud set and bud break of aspen is not disappearing over 4‐year study period. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5632631/ /pubmed/29043051 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3352 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Sivadasan, Unnikrishnan
Randriamanana, Tendry
Chenhao, Cao
Virjamo, Virpi
Nybakken, Line
Julkunen‐Tiitto, Riitta
Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title_full Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title_fullStr Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title_full_unstemmed Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title_short Effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (Populus tremula. L)
title_sort effect of climate change on bud phenology of young aspen plants (populus tremula. l)
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5632631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29043051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3352
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