2015
DOI: 10.1080/00330124.2015.1059404
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Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustrisMill.) Morphology and Climate/Growth Responses Along a Physiographic Gradient in North Carolina

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Cited by 19 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…A maximum of two cores per tree were insured using the RCWC tree identification number. We used latewood widths to build the chronologies because latewood is more closely related to climatic conditions than totalwood widths for longleaf pine (Henderson and Grissino-Mayer, 2009;Patterson et al, 2016). The RCWC tree chronology had a mean interseries correlation of 0.552 and a mean sensitivity of 0.455; the RCWCo chronology had a mean interseries correlation of 0.539 and a mean sensitivity of 0.457.…”
Section: Chronologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A maximum of two cores per tree were insured using the RCWC tree identification number. We used latewood widths to build the chronologies because latewood is more closely related to climatic conditions than totalwood widths for longleaf pine (Henderson and Grissino-Mayer, 2009;Patterson et al, 2016). The RCWC tree chronology had a mean interseries correlation of 0.552 and a mean sensitivity of 0.455; the RCWCo chronology had a mean interseries correlation of 0.539 and a mean sensitivity of 0.457.…”
Section: Chronologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, removal of latewood's dependence on earlywood improves the summer-rainfall signal (Meko and Baisan, 2001;Stahle et al, 2009;Griffin et al, 2011;Zhao et al, 2017). As longleaf pine growth is commonly driven by precipitation, this new ring-width parameter is best suited for our study (Foster and Brooks, 2001;Sayer and Haywood, 2006;Henderson and Grissino-Mayer, 2009;van de Gevel et al, 2009;Patterson et al, 2016;Goode et al, 2019;Mitchell et al, 2019).…”
Section: Chronologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Longleaf pine ( Pinus palustris Mill.) latewood growth is significantly correlated with summer rainfall totals (e.g., Henderson and Grissino‐Mayer, 2009; Patterson et al ., 2016; Mitchell et al ., 2019a) with the strongest relationships associated with slow‐moving systems (i.e, stationary fronts, TCs) that produce ‘soaker’ rainfalls (e.g., Knapp et al ., 2016; Mitchell et al ., 2019b). On the coastal plains of North Carolina, TCP can account for 50% of the interannual variance of latewood ring widths (Knapp et al ., 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%