Abstract Under drought, potential plant death from depletion of carbon (C) stores, referred to as carbon starvation, is thought to result from negative carbon balance during (partial) stomatal closure. As… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Under drought, potential plant death from depletion of carbon (C) stores, referred to as carbon starvation, is thought to result from negative carbon balance during (partial) stomatal closure. As evidence for C starvation is rare for mature trees, we investigated the C dynamics in mature beech and spruce under drought, focusing on non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) as an indicator of their C balance. Trees were exposed to complete exclusion of precipitation throughfall over two consecutive growing seasons. We assessed NSC concentrations during the early dormant season in leaves, twigs, stem phloem/xylem, coarse and fine roots. Up-scaling to whole-tree NSC pools was achieved using a process-based single-tree model (“BALANCE”), estimating tree biomass increment. While there were distinct differences in NSC concentration among different tissues in both beech and spruce (root
               
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