SOUTH-AMERICAN TREE-RINGS SHOW DECLINING DELTA-C-13 TREND

Authors
Citation
Sw. Leavitt et A. Lara, SOUTH-AMERICAN TREE-RINGS SHOW DECLINING DELTA-C-13 TREND, Tellus. Series B, Chemical and physical meteorology, 46(2), 1994, pp. 152-157
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
ISSN journal
02806509
Volume
46
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
152 - 157
Database
ISI
SICI code
0280-6509(1994)46:2<152:STSDDT>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
A composite, 290-year tree-ring deltaC-13 chronology was developed fro m a site in Chile where 5 Fitroya cupressoides (alerce) trees were sam pled, 2 increment cores per tree, and the holocellulose component was analyzed in 5-year ring groups. This chronology shows a decreasing del taC-13 trend of approximately 1.2 parts per thousand, primarily since the turn of this century. This deltaC-13 decline is similar to that of major tree-ring studies in the Northern Hemisphere, but it is the onl y major Southern Hemisphere study which clearly exhibits such a deltaC -13 trend. This is the first evidence for any interhemispheric reprodu cibility of tree-ring deltaC-13 chronologies, and furthermore, the Fit zroya deltaC-13 trend conforms well to that of deltaC-13 of atmospheri c CO2 determined from ice cores and direct measurements. This correspo ndence suggests the alerce deltaC-13 trend has not been substantially influenced by systematic changes in environmental factors such light, relative humidity and soil moisture or by changing atmospheric CO2 con centration, all of which are, in theory, capable of altering C(i)/C(a) ratios and obscuring the atmospheric deltaC-13 record contained in th e tree rings.