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Comparison of methods for the demarcation between earlywood and latewood in tree rings of Norway spruce

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Abstract The precise demarcation between earlywood and latewood is important for the detailed analysis of intra-annual tree ring features. Different techniques based on visual assessment, wood anatomy analysis and X-ray… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The precise demarcation between earlywood and latewood is important for the detailed analysis of intra-annual tree ring features. Different techniques based on visual assessment, wood anatomy analysis and X-ray densitometry have been developed and are currently used for this purpose. Depending on the chosen method, tree species and environmental conditions, the results can significantly vary. Thus, it is important to determine the technique optimal for a particular research. Here, we investigated Norway spruce ( Picea abies) tree rings to examine the agreement among the following demarcation methods: (1) direct visual assessment, (2) Mork’s index (anatomical definition of the transition from earlywood to latewood based on cell wall-lumen ratio) and (3) fixed and floating density thresholds applied to intra-ring density profiles. The aim was to modify both the Mork’s criterion and density thresholds on the basis of reference values given by visual identification of earlywood/latewood transition. A total of 231 tree rings were analysed by all methods. Our results showed that the usage of floating threshold (defined for each ring separately based on density profiles) is more reliable in comparison with fixed threshold (the same threshold value used for all tree rings and samples). Statistical analysis revealed the best correspondence between visual identification of earlywood/latewood transition and demarcation based on the standard Mork’s index and the floating density threshold derived as 80 % of maximum latewood density. In terms of Mork’s index calibration, the results showed that to determine latewood cells in Norway spruce trees growing in temperate conditions, it is sufficient to use an index value equal to 0.83. The results are applicable for the studied spruce population growing in a temperate climate. The methodology itself, however, is universal and can help to calibrate criteria for earlywood-latewood demarcation under specific conditions.

Keywords: earlywood latewood; norway spruce; density; tree rings; demarcation

Journal Title: Dendrochronologia
Year Published: 2020

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