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Dendrochronology of Chinese pine in Mulan-Weichang, Hebei Province: A primary study.

CUI Ming-xing1,2; HE Xing-yuan1; CHEN Wei1; CHEN Zhen-ju1; ZHOU Chang-hong3; WU Tao4   

  1. 1Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyng 110016, China;2Graduate Univesity of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049 ,China;3State-owned Forest Bureau of Mulan-Weichang, Chengde 068450, Heibei, China; 4Forest Bureau of Huder, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Yakesi, 022164, Inner Mongolia, China
  • Received:2008-02-22 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2008-11-20 Published:2008-11-20

Abstract: Dendroclimatic methods were used to investigate the relationships between the growth of Chinese pine (Pinus tabulaeformis Carr.) and the climatic parameters in Mulan-Weichang of Hebei Province. The results showed that Chinese pine presented high sensitivity to climatic changes, and its earlywood width showed the highest sensitivity. There was a significant negative correlation between the tree-ring width chronology of Chinese pine and the air temperature in May-June. The precipitation and relative humidity in June had strong positive effects on the growth of earlywood, the precipitation from September to next September had significant positive effects on Chinese pine growth, and the relative humidity in winter more strongly affected the growth of latewood than of earlywood. There was a definite correlation between the tree-ring width chronology of Chinese pine and the large scale climate fluctuation. From 1951 to 2006, the increase of air temperature in study area was significant, and the sensitivity of Chinese pine to the variations of local temperature and precipitation decreased, presenting an inverse transforming trend with increasing temperature. Greater differences were observed between the reconstructed and observed data of mean temperature in May-June in a century scale, suggesting that the tree-ring growth of Chinese pine in study area had a greater fluctuation of sensitivity to the variation of climatic factors.

Key words: δ18O and δ2H, ecohydrological separation, hydrological connectivity, bound water, mobile water