Published February 2025 | Published
Journal Article Open

Shining a new light on the classical concepts of carbon-isotope dendrochronology

  • 1. ROR icon Umeå Plant Science Centre
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Retrospective information about plant ecophysiology and the climate system are key inputs in Earth system and vegetation models. Dendrochronology provides such information with large spatiotemporal coverage, and carbon-isotope analysis across tree-ring series is among the most advanced dendrochronological tools. For the past 70 years, this analysis was performed on whole molecules and, to this day, 13C discrimination during carbon assimilation is invoked to explain isotope variation and associated climate signals. However, recently it was reported that tree-ring glucose exhibits multiple isotope signals at the intramolecular level (see Wieloch et al., 2025). Here, I estimated the signals' contribution to whole-molecule isotope variation and found that downstream processes in leaf and stem metabolism each introduce more variation than carbon assimilation. Moreover, downstream processes introduce most of the climate information. These findings are inconsistent with the classical concepts/practices of carbon-isotope dendrochronology. More importantly, intramolecular tree-ring isotope analysis promises novel insights into forest metabolism and the climate of the past.

 

Copyright and License

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgement

This work was carried out with funding from ‘Formas – a Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development’ (2022-02833, grant recipient: TW). I am grateful to Preprints.org (MDPI AG, Basel, Switzerland) for publishing preprints of this paper (https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202403.0014/v2).

Data Availability

The author declares that the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the paper (Fig. 1; Tables 12) and its Supporting Information (Notes S3; Figs S2–S4; Table S1).

Supplemental Material

Notes S1-S3; Figs. S1-S4; Table S1 (PDF)

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New Phytologist - 2024 - Wieloch - Shining a new light on the classical concepts of carbon‐isotope dendrochronology.pdf

Additional details

Created:
January 30, 2025
Modified:
January 30, 2025