2015
DOI: 10.5194/bg-12-5353-2015
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Tree water relations can trigger monoterpene emissions from Scots pine stems during spring recovery

Abstract: Abstract. Tree canopies are known to emit large amounts of VOCs (volatile organic compounds) such as monoterpenes into the surrounding air. High VOC emission rates from boreal forests have been observed during the transition from winter to summer activity. The most important sources of these are considered to be the green foliage, understory vegetation and soil organisms, but emissions from the living stand woody compartments have so far not been quantified. We analyzed whether the non-foliar components could … Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Our analyses also indicate that high GPP at the beginning of the growing season promotes radial growth supporting the findings of Schiestl-Aalto et al (2015), Chan et al (2015) and Babst et al (2014). The role of early carbon gain can be seen also in the negative correlation with NEE, whose negative values indicate carbon uptake as opposed to GPP.…”
Section: Ring Widthsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Our analyses also indicate that high GPP at the beginning of the growing season promotes radial growth supporting the findings of Schiestl-Aalto et al (2015), Chan et al (2015) and Babst et al (2014). The role of early carbon gain can be seen also in the negative correlation with NEE, whose negative values indicate carbon uptake as opposed to GPP.…”
Section: Ring Widthsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…This could reflect the fact that growth at the lower part of a stem is not critically limited by air humidity conditions and the level of water potential, which is always higher at the lower part of a stem than at shoots (Zimmermann 1983). Also this combination of conditions is normally favourable for photosynthetic production (Chan et al 2015).…”
Section: Ring Widthmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Information about emission of storage or non-storage monoterpenes from the pine foliage, branches, stem or forest floor is, however, lacking at our site but BVOC measurements could have casted a light on the overly high O 3 fluxes, measured during spring 2007 or in other years with high O 3 dry deposition rates (e.g., 2010). Excessive springtime monoterpene emissions or standard emission rates were measured in Pinus stands as a consequence of drought stress (Bäck et al, 2005), springtime phase change in stem water transport capacity (Vanhatalo et al, 2015), bud break (Kim, 2001), general stress to the plant (Komenda and Koppmann, 2002) or disturbed tree-herbivore relations (Phillips and Croteau, 1999;Trowbridge et al, 2014). Emission of BVOCs from intact Scots pine branches can be very high in early spring, often much higher than the emission occurring later in the growing season (Tarvainen et al, 2005;Hakola et al, 2006).…”
Section: Drivers Of Non-stomatal Depositionmentioning
confidence: 99%