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15 March 2021 Correcting Eccentric Growth Rings Using Basal Area Increment: A Case Study for a Desert Shrub in Northwestern China
Ai-Jun Ding, Sheng-Chun Xiao, Quan-Yan Tian, Chao Han
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Abstract

Because of the eccentric radial growth for shrubs, climatic signals recorded by their ring-width series tend to be distorted. We hypothesized that measured Basal Area Increment (BAI) can overcome such a weakness. We used the desert shrub Zygophyllum xanthoxylum, with eccentric radial growth to test this hypothesis. RWI (mRWI) and BAI standard chronologies were established based on the ring-width data. Then, we converted BAI into RWI and created a transformed RWI (tRWI) standard chronology. Both BAI and tRWI showed higher correlation with climate records than mRWI, although their correlation coefficients were not significantly different from each other. Based on the comparison between tRWI and mRWI chronologies, mRWI overestimates the radial growth of Z. xanthoxylum caused by eccentric form. BAI can be applied to increase accuracy in dendrochronological studies for shrubs with eccentric growth.

Copyright © 2021 by the Tree-Ring Society
Ai-Jun Ding, Sheng-Chun Xiao, Quan-Yan Tian, and Chao Han "Correcting Eccentric Growth Rings Using Basal Area Increment: A Case Study for a Desert Shrub in Northwestern China," Tree-Ring Research 77(1), 1-9, (15 March 2021). https://doi.org/10.3959/TRR2020-4
Received: 24 April 2020; Accepted: 11 July 2020; Published: 15 March 2021
KEYWORDS
BAI chronology
climate response
RWI chronology
shrub rings
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