Growth-Ring Boundary Anatomy And Dendrochronological Potential In A Moist Tropical Forest In Northeastern Bangladesh
Issue Date
2018-01Keywords
moist tropical foresttree-ring analysis
Bangladesh
growth-ring boundary
wood anatomy
boundary distinctness
tree ages
growth trajectory
dendrochronological potential
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Mahmuda Islam, Mizanur Rahman, and Achim Bräuning "Growth-Ring Boundary Anatomy and Dendrochronological Potential in a Moist Tropical Forest in Northeastern Bangladesh," Tree-Ring Research 74(1), 76-93, (1 January 2018). https://doi.org/10.3959/1536-1098-74.1.76Publisher
Tree-Ring SocietyJournal
Tree-Ring ResearchAdditional Links
https://www.treeringsociety.org/Abstract
We present the microscopic analysis of growth-ring boundary anatomy of 27 tree species from a moist tropical forest in Bangladesh and evaluate their dendrochronological potential. We observed high inter-species variability in the anatomical features that define growth-ring boundaries. Marginal parenchyma, fibre zones, and thick-walled latewood fibres were identified as the dominant anatomical features delineating growth-ring boundaries. The evaluation of growth-ring boundary distinctness in thin-sections and scanned images revealed that 25 out of 27 studied species (93%) showed distinct to fairly distinct growth-ring boundaries. Cluster analysis of wood anatomical features was used to select an additional 5 species for further investigation. Ring-width series of these species crossdated well within the same tree. Between trees crossdating was also successful in all 5 species. The Gleichlaufigkeit (GLK; i.e. the proportion of agreement/disagreement of inter-annual growth tendencies among the trees) varied among species between 0.55 and 0.71. A strong synchronization of tree-ring series between trees suggests that growth rings are annual and influenced by common environmental factors. The derived tree-ring series, estimated tree ages, and growth trajectories underline the high potential of our study area for answering a variety of climatological, ecological and archaeological questions by applying den-drochronology. This study will therefore provide a new endeavor in tropical dendrochronology of South Asian moist tropical forests.Type
Articletext
ISSN
1536-1098EISSN
2162-4585ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3959/1536-1098-74.1.76