Radiocarbon Analysis of Pinus lagunae Tree Rings: Implications for Tropical Dendrochronology
Issue Date
1999-01-01Keywords
Pinusgrowth
statistical analysis
Pinaceae
seasonal variations
applications
tropical environment
Baja California
dendrograms
Sierra la Laguna
Sierra La Victoria
tree rings
Coniferales
Gymnospermae
Spermatophyta
Holocene
Plantae
chronology
Mexico
Cenozoic
Quaternary
wood
C 14
carbon
dates
isotopes
radioactive isotopes
absolute age
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Biondi, F., & Fessenden, J. E. (1999). Radiocarbon analysis of Pinus lagunae tree rings: Implications for tropical dendrochronology. Radiocarbon, 41(3), 241-249.Journal
RadiocarbonAdditional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
A promising species for tropical dendrochronology is Pinus lagunae, a pine tree found in Baja California Sur (Mexico) around lat 23.5 degrees N. In 1995, we sampled a total of 27 wood cores from 13 Pinus lagunae trees in Sierra La Victoria (23 degrees 36'N, 109 degrees 56'W), just north of Sierra La Laguna, at an elevation of 1500-1600 m. Selected trees were locally dominant, but their ring-width patterns could not be crossdated. To test the hypothesis that visible growth layers in Pinus lagunae are formed annually, we measured radiocarbon amounts in individual rings by means of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). Twenty-three 14C measurements were used to trace the location of the 1963-64 "bomb spike" in 3 wood increment cores. By comparing the location of that Delta-14C extreme with the number of visible radial wood increments, it was possible to conclude that 2 cores had a number of locally absent rings, while the 3rd one included a few years with more than one growth layer. Therefore, ring-width patterns of sampled Pinus lagunae were not consistent from one tree to another, most likely because of climatic regime in combination with microsite features. While the possibility of generating Pinus lagunae tree-ring chronologies cannot entirely be ruled out, the development of dendrochronological proxy records of climate from coniferous species in tropical North America should focus on species and sites that experience a more pronounced seasonality.Type
Articletext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200057118