Drivers of intra-seasonal δ13 C signal in tree-rings of Pinus sylvestris as indicated by compound-specific and laser ablation isotope analysis

  • Katja T Rinne-Garmston
  • Yu Tang
  • Elina Sahlstedt
  • Bartosz Adamczyk
  • Matthias Saurer
  • Yann Salmon
  • María Del Rosario Domínguez Carrasco
  • Teemu Hölttä
  • Marco M Lehmann
  • Lan Mo
  • Giles H F Young

Abstract

Carbon isotope composition of tree-ring (δ13 CRing ) is a commonly used proxy for environmental change and ecophysiology. δ13 CRing reconstructions are based on a solid knowledge of isotope fractionations during formation of primary photosynthates (δ13 CP ), such as sucrose. However, δ13 CRing is not merely a record of δ13 CP . Isotope fractionation processes, which are not yet fully understood, modify δ13 CP during sucrose transport. We traced, how the environmental intra-seasonal δ13 CP signal changes from leaves to phloem, tree-ring and roots, for 7 year old Pinus sylvestris, using δ13 C analysis of individual carbohydrates, δ13 CRing laser ablation, leaf gas exchange and enzyme activity measurements. The intra-seasonal δ13 CP dynamics was clearly reflected by δ13 CRing , suggesting negligible impact of reserve use on δ13 CRing . However, δ13 CP became increasingly 13 C-enriched during down-stem transport, probably due to post-photosynthetic fractionations such as sink organ catabolism. In contrast, δ13 C of water-soluble carbohydrates, analysed for the same extracts, did not reflect the same isotope dynamics and fractionations as δ13 CP , but recorded intra-seasonal δ13 CP variability. The impact of environmental signals on δ13 CRing , and the 0.5 and 1.7‰ depletion in photosynthates compared ring organic matter and tree-ring cellulose, respectively, are useful pieces of information for studies exploiting δ13 CRing .

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0140-7791
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 09.2023
Externally publishedYes

Comment Deanary

© 2023 The Authors. Plant, Cell & Environment published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PubMed 37312624