Aspen Bibliography
Carbon isotope composition of boreal plants: Functional grouping of life forms
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Oecologia
Volume
110
Issue
3
First Page
301
Last Page
311
Publication Date
1997
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that life forms (trees, shrubs, forbs, and mosses; deciduous or evergreen) can be used to group plants with similar physiological characteristics. Carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) and carbon isotope discrimination (Δ) were used as functional characteristics because δ13C and Δ integrate information about CO2 and water fluxes, and so are useful in global change and scaling studies. We examined δ13C values of the dominant species in three boreal forest ecosystems: wet Picea mariana stands, mesic Populus tremuloides stands, and dry Pinus banksiana stands. Life form groups explained a significant fraction of the variation in leaf carbon isotope composition; seven life-form categories explained 50% of the variation in δ13C and 42% of the variation in Δ and 52% of the variance not due to intraspecific genetic differences (n=335). The life forms were ranked in the following order based on their values: evergreen trees
Recommended Citation
Brooks, J.R. et al. 1997. Carbon isotope composition of boreal plants: functional grouping of life forms. Onecologia. 110(3): 301-311.