The short-term effect of sudden gap creation on tree temperature and volatile composition profiles in a Norway spruce st
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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
The short‑term effect of sudden gap creation on tree temperature and volatile composition profiles in a Norway spruce stand Jana Marešová1 · Andrej Majdák1 · Rastislav Jakuš1,2 · Jaromír Hradecký2 · Blanka Kalinová2 · Miroslav Blaženec1 Received: 24 January 2020 / Accepted: 12 July 2020 © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2020
Abstract Key message Higher solar radiation leads to higher crown temperatures, sap flow, and airborne volatile concentrations as well as altered bark chemical composition in trees at fresh forest edge. Abstract Spruce bark beetles are likely to attack trees that are at newly opened forest edges after wind disturbance due to higher temperatures and higher emission of primary attractants. The mechanisms behind these phenomena are still not fully known. We investigated how sudden gap creation affects tree physiology parameters related to induced defence processes in Norway spruce trees 2 months after the disturbance driven gap formation. We hypothesized that the sudden sun exposure of mature spruce trees would increase: (1) bark and crown temperatures, (2) sap flow rates, and (3) the phloem and airborne concentration of terpenes. Using a terrestrial and airborne thermal camera, sap flow sensors, and chromatography, we confirmed that trees at the forest edge had significantly higher (1) mean tree crown temperature, (2) mean sap flow rates (2-fold higher) and (3) airborne concentration of α-pinene (αP, 12.2-fold higher) and β-pinene (βP, 7.9-fold higher) close to the bark. We observed a significant positive correlation (R2 = 0.77) between the measured sap flow rates and terpene concentrations in airborne samples. Bark temperatures were not significant. In the phloem samples, analyzed by GC–MS, αP and βP predominated over monoterpenes 3-carene, myrcene, limonene, 1.8-cineole, and bornyl acetate. GC × GC–TOF–MS analysis of phloem showed a higher relative abundance of resin acid methyl esters in the forest interior trees and higher relative abundances of dehydro-p-cymene in the trees at the forest edge. Our findings are discussed in the context of the enhanced predisposition of trees at the newly formed forest edge to bark beetles attack. Keywords Terpenes · Resin acid methylesters · Solar radiation · Sap flow · GC × GC–TOF–MS · Tree temperature
Introduction Tree-killing bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, subfamily Scolytinae) are the most economically damaging insect pests in conifer forests worldwide (Biedermann et al. 2019). The ongoing Ips typographus L. outbreak connected with the 2018 drought caused damage to more than 40 million m−3 of forest in Europe so far (Hlásny et al. 2019). Communicated by Resco de Dios. * Andrej Majdák [email protected] 1
Institute of Forest Ecology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Zvolen, Slovak Republic
Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
2
In mountain conditions, Ips typographus often attacks newly created forest edges (relate
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