2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0378-1127(02)00446-2
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Influence of topographic aspect, precipitation and drought on radial growth of four major tree species in an Appalachian watershed

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Cited by 178 publications
(148 citation statements)
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“…In our study, F. sylvatica maintains steady mean mature BAI at the HFL and CFA, comparable with mature tree AVI in P. rubens in the study reported by LeBlanc et al (1992). However, in many species BAI continues to increase with age in mature trees (Phipps & Whiton, 1988;LeBlanc, 1990a, b;Duchesne et al, 2002Duchesne et al, , 2003Fekedulegn et al, 2003;Muzika et al, 2004) in some cases showing no evidence of the reduction in slope that LeBlanc (1990a, b) associates with canopy closure.…”
Section: Temporal Trends In Baisupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…In our study, F. sylvatica maintains steady mean mature BAI at the HFL and CFA, comparable with mature tree AVI in P. rubens in the study reported by LeBlanc et al (1992). However, in many species BAI continues to increase with age in mature trees (Phipps & Whiton, 1988;LeBlanc, 1990a, b;Duchesne et al, 2002Duchesne et al, , 2003Fekedulegn et al, 2003;Muzika et al, 2004) in some cases showing no evidence of the reduction in slope that LeBlanc (1990a, b) associates with canopy closure.…”
Section: Temporal Trends In Baisupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Trees at the HFL and CFA show a similar pattern of BAI to that reported for Liriodendron tulipifera (yellow poplar), Quercus prinus (chestnut oak), Q. rubra (northern red oak) and Acer rubrum (red maple) by Fekedulegn et al (2003) and for the closely related measure of annual volume increment (AVI) in Picea rubens (red spruce) by LeBlanc (1990a, b) and LeBlanc et al (1992) (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Temporal Trends In Baisupporting
confidence: 72%
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“…This will be the focus of future research. There are clear differences in drought resistance among co-occurring species, which can originate from different physiological responses to drought [34,35] and species-site interactions [36]. The hydraulic framework proposed by McDowell et al [11] suggests that trees are more likely to die via hydraulic failure under sudden and intense droughts, however, strict control of stomata closure under those conditions is predicted to be beneficial.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Northern red oak, a deciduous species that occupies low-to high-elevation sites across the Southern Appalachian mountain range, has received considerable attention in dendroclimatic research (e.g., Tainter et al, 1990;Pan et al, 1997;Fekedulegn et al, 2003;Speer et al, 2009); however, these studies were based on tree-ring records from lower elevation closed-canopy stands where climate is less variable and often markedly differs from higher elevation regions (Konrad, 1996). In this paper, a collection of six open-canopy high-elevation northern red oak (Quercus rubra L.) ring-width records are evaluated for the presence of a common climate-driven growth signal across the Southern Appalachian mountain range in the southeastern United States.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%