Variation of Oriental Oak (Quercus variabilis) Leaf δ13C across Temperate and Subtropical China: Spatial Patterns and Sensitivity to Precipitation

Citation

Du, B.; Kang, H.; Zhu, Y.; Zhou, X.; Yin, S.; Burgess, P.J.; Liu, C. Variation of Oriental Oak (Quercus variabilis) Leaf δ13C across Temperate and Subtropical China: Spatial Patterns and Sensitivity to Precipitation. Forests 2015, 6, 2296-2306.

Abstract

The concentration of the carbon-13 isotope (leaf δ13C) in leaves is negatively correlated with the mean annual precipitation (MAP) atlarge geographical scales. In this paper, we explain the spatial pattern of leaf δ13C variation for deciduous oriental oak (Quercus variabilis Bl.) across temperate and subtropical biomes and its sensitivity to climate factors such as MAP. There was a 6‰ variation in the leaf δ13C values of oak with a significant positive correlation with latitude and negative correlations with the mean annual temperature (MAT) and MAP. There was no correlation between leaf δ13C and altitude or longitude. Stepwise multiple regression analyses showed that leaf δ13C decreased 0.3‰ per 100 mm increase in MAP. MAP alone could account for 68% of the observed variation in leaf δ13C. These results can be used to improve predictions for plant responses to climate change and particularly lower rainfall.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Carbon isotope, Oak, Precipitation, Latitude, Quercus variabilis

DOI

Rights

All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. This means: •everyone has free and unlimited access to the full-text of all articles published in MDPI journals, and •everyone is free to re-use the published material if proper accreditation/citation of the original publication is given. •open access publication is supported by the authors' institutes or research funding agencies by payment of a comparatively low Article Processing Charge (APC) for accepted articles.

Relationships

Relationships

Supplements

Funder/s