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Long-term growth decline in Toona ciliata in a moist tropical forest in Bangladesh: Impact of global warming
Institution:1. Department of Forestry and Environmental Science, Shahjalal University of Science and Technology, Sylhet 3114, Bangladesh;2. Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), Institute of Geography, Wetterkreuz 15, 91058 Erlangen, Germany;1. School of Nature Conservation, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China;2. Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation, Taizhou University, Taizhou 318000, China;1. Laboratorio de Ecologia, CCBS, Universidade Federal do Mato Grosso do Sul, Campo Grande, MS 79070-900, Brazil;2. Departmento de Ecologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, 59078-900, Brazil;1. Institute for Peat and Mire Research, Northeast Normal University, State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration, Renmin 5268, Changchun 130024, PR China;2. Institute of Grassland Sciences, Northeast Normal University, Key Laboratory for Vegetation Ecology, Ministry of Education, Changchun, PR China;3. Swedish Species Information Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, PO Box 7007, SE-750 07, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:Tropical forests are carbon rich ecosystems and small changes in tropical forest tree growth substantially influence the global carbon cycle. Forest monitoring studies report inconsistent growth changes in tropical forest trees over the past decades. Most of the studies highlighted changes in the forest level carbon gain, neglecting the species-specific growth changes which ultimately determine community-level responses. Tree-ring analysis can provide historical data on species-specific tree growth with annual resolution. Such studies are inadequate in Bangladesh, which is one of the most climate sensitive regions in the tropics. In this study, we investigated long-term growth rates of Toona ciliata in a moist tropical forest of Bangladesh by using tree-ring analysis. We sampled 50 trees of varying size, obtained increment cores from these trees and measured tree-ring width. Analyses of growth patterns revealed size-dependent growth increments. After correcting for the effect of tree size on tree growth (ontogenetic changes) by two different methods we found declining growth rates in T. ciliata from 1960 to 2013. Standardized ring-width index (RWI) was strongly negatively correlated with annual mean and maximum temperatures suggesting that rising temperature might cause the observed growth decline in T. ciliata. Assuming that global temperatures will rise at the current rate, the observed growth decline is assumed to continue. The analysis of stable carbon and oxygen isotopes may reveal more insight on the physiological response of this species to future climatic changes.
Keywords:Climate change  Dendrochronology  Growth trend  Juri forest  Tree growth  Tropical forests
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