Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T08:33:45.567Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Radiocarbon Analysis Confirms the Annual Nature of Sagebrush Growth Rings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2016

Franco Biondi*
Affiliation:
DendroLab, Department of Geography, and Graduate Program of Hydrologic Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557, USA
Scotty D J Strachan
Affiliation:
DendroLab, Department of Geography, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557, USA
Scott Mensing
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557, USA
Gianluca Piovesan
Affiliation:
Department of Environment and Forests, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy
*
Corresponding author. Email: fbiondi@unr.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

In the Great Basin of North America, big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata Nutt.) growth rings can be used to reconstruct environmental changes with annual resolution in areas where there is otherwise little such information available. We tested the annual nature of big sagebrush wood layers using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dating. Four cross-sections from 3 sagebrush plants were collected near Ely, Nevada, USA, and analyzed using dendrochronological methods. Ten 14C measurements were then used to trace the location of the 1963–64 “bomb spike.” Although the number of rings on each section did not exceed 60, crossdating was possible within a section and between sections. Years assigned to individual wood layers by means of crossdating aligned with their expected 14C values, matching the location of the 14C peak. This result confirmed the annual nature of growth rings formed by big sagebrush, and will facilitate the development of spatially explicit, well-replicated proxy records of environmental change, such as wildfire regimes, in Great Basin valleys.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2007 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona 

References

Baillie, MGL, Pilcher, JR. 1973. A simple crossdating program for tree-ring research. Tree-Ring Bulletin 33:714.Google Scholar
Baker, WL, Shinneman, DJ. 2004. Fire and restoration of piñon-juniper woodlands in the western United States: a review. Forest Ecology and Management 189(1–3):121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biondi, F, Fessenden, JE. 1999. Radiocarbon analysis of Pinus lagunae tree rings: implications for tropical dendrochronology. Radiocarbon 41(3):241–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackburn, WH, Tueller, PT. 1970. Pinyon and juniper invasion in black sagebrush communities in east-central Nevada. Ecology 51(5):841–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowman, S. 1990. Radiocarbon Dating. Berkeley: University of California Press. 64 p.Google Scholar
Brooks, ML, D'Antonio, CM, Richardson, DM, Grace, JB, Keeley, JE, DiTomaso, JM, Hobbs, RJ, Pellant, M, Pyke, D. 2003. Fire regimes and potential for ecosystem recovery after plant invasions. In: Pirosko, C, editor. Proceedings of the California Invasive Plant Council Symposium. Volume 7. Berkeley: California Invasive Plant Council. p 21.Google Scholar
Burkhardt, JW, Tisdale, EW. 1976. Causes of juniper invasion in southwestern Idaho. Ecology 57(3):472–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cawker, KB. 1980. Evidence of climatic control from population age structure of Artemisia tridentata Nutt. in southern British Columbia. Journal of Biogeography 7(3):237–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cronquist, A, Holmgren, A, Holgren, N, Reveal, J, Holmgren, P. 1994. Intermountain Flora: Vascular Plants of the Intermountain West, USA. New York: New York Botanical Garden. 446 p.Google Scholar
Dezzeo, N, Worbes, M, Ishii, I, Herrera, R. 2003. Annual tree rings revealed by radiocarbon dating in seasonally flooded forest of the Mapire River, a tributary of the lower Orinoco River, Venezuela. Plant Ecology 168(3):165–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diettert, RA. 1938. The morphology of Artemisia tridentata Nutt. Lloydia 1:374.Google Scholar
Eckstein, D, Bauch, J. 1969. Beitrag zur rationalisierung eines dendrochronologischen verfahrens und zur analyse seiner aussagesicherheit. Forstwissenschaftliches Centralblatt 88:230–50. In German.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Egan, D, Howell, EA, editors. 2001. The Historical Ecology Handbook: A Restorationist's Guide to Reference Ecosystems. Washington, DC: Island Press. 469 p.Google Scholar
Ferguson, CW. 1964. Annual Rings in Big Sagebrush: Artemisia tridentata. Papers of the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, No. 1. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 95 p.Google Scholar
Floyd, ML, Romme, WH, Hanna, DD. 2000. Fire history and vegetation pattern in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, USA. Ecological Applications 10(6):1666–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frantz, BR, Kashgarian, M, Coale, KH, Foster, MS. 2000. Growth rate and potential climate record from a rhodolith using 14C accelerator mass spectrometry. Limnology and Oceanography 45(8):1773–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grissino-Mayer, HD. 1997. Computer assisted, independent observer verification of tree-ring measurements. Tree-Ring Bulletin 54:2941.Google Scholar
Grissino-Mayer, HD. 2001. Evaluating crossdating accuracy: a manual and tutorial for the computer program COFECHA. Tree-Ring Research 57(2):205–21.Google Scholar
Gruell, GE. 1999. Historical and modern roles of fire in pinyon-juniper. In: Monsen, SB, Stevens, R, editors. Proceedings: Ecology and Management of Pinyon-Juniper Communities within the Interior West. Proceedings RMRS-P-9. USDA, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Ogden, Utah. p 24–8.Google Scholar
Holmes, RL. 1983. Computer-assisted quality control in tree-ring dating and measurement. Tree-Ring Bulletin 43:6978.Google Scholar
Horvitz, CC, Sternberg, LDSLOR. 1999. 14C dating of tree falls on Barro Colorado Island (Panama): a new method to study tropical rain forest gap dynamics. Journal of Tropical Ecology 15(6):723–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houston, DB. 1973. Wildfires in northern Yellowstone National Park. Ecology 54(5): 1111–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hua, Q, Barbetti, M. 2004. Review of tropospheric bomb 14C data for carbon cycle modeling and age calibration purposes. Radiocarbon 46(3): 1273–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jolliffe, IT. 1986. Principal Component Analysis. (Springer Series in Statistics). New York: Springer. 271 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kartén, I, Olsson, IU, Kallberg, P, Kilicci, S. 1968. Absolute determination of the activity of two 14C dating standards. Arkiv för Geofysik 4:465–71.Google Scholar
Little, EL Jr. 1976. Atlas of United States Trees. Volume 3: Minor Western Hardwoods. Miscellaneous Publication 1314, US Department of Agriculture. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office. 290 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maier, AM, Perryman, BL, Olson, RA, Hild, AL. 2001. Climatic influences on recruitment of 3 subspecies of Artemisia tridentata. Journal of Range Management 54(6):699703.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mensing, SA, Livingston, S, Barker, P. 2006. Long-term fire history in Great Basin sagebrush reconstructed from macroscopic charcoal in spring sediments, Newark Valley, Nevada. Western North American Naturalist 66:6477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, RF, Rose, JA. 1999. Fire history and western juniper encroachment in sagebrush steppe. Journal of Range Management 52(6):550–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, RF, Tausch, RJ. 2001. The role of fire in juniper and pinyon woodlands: a descriptive analysis. In: Galley, KEM, Wilson, TP, editors. Proceedings of the Invasive Species Workshop: The Role of Fire in the Control and Spread of Invasive Species. Miscellaneous Publication No. 11. Tallahassee, Florida, USA: Tall Timbers Research Station. p 1530.Google Scholar
Olsson, IU. 1970. The use of oxalic acid as a standard. In: Olsson, IU, editor. Radiocarbon Variations and Absolute Chronology. Nobel Symposium, 12th Proceedings. New York: John Wiley and Sons. p 17.Google Scholar
Paysen, TE, Ansley, RJ, Brown, JK, Gottfried, GJ, Haase, SM, Harrington, MG, Narog, MG, Sackett, SS, Wilson, RC. 2000. Fire in western shrubland, woodland and grassland ecosystems. In: Brown, JK, Smith, JK, editors. Wildland Fire in Ecosystems: Effects of Fire on Flora. Volume 2. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-42. p 121–59.Google Scholar
Perfors, T, Harte, J, Alter, SE. 2003. Enhanced growth of sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) in response to manipulated ecosystem warming. Global Change Biology 9(5):736–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perryman, BL, Olson, RA. 2000. Age-stem diameter relationships of big sagebrush and their management implications. Journal of Range Management 53(3):342–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perryman, BL, Maier, AM, Hild, AL, Olson, RA. 2001. Demographic characteristics of 3 Artemisia tridentata Nutt. subspecies. Journal of Range Management 54(2):166–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poussart, PF, Evans, MN, Schrag, DP. 2004. Resolving seasonality in tropical trees: multi-decade, high-resolution oxygen and carbon isotopic records from Indonesia and Thailand. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 218(3–4):301–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowell, R, editor. 1984. The Chemistry of Solid Wood. Washington, DC: American Chemical Society. 614 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shumar, ML, Anderson, JE, Reynolds, TD. 1982. Identification of subspecies of big sagebrush by ultraviolet spectrophotometry. Journal of Range Management 35(3):60–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stokes, MA, Smiley, TL. 1996. An Introduction to Tree-Ring Dating. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 73 p.Google Scholar
Swetnam, TW, Allen, CD, Betancourt, JL. 1999. Applied historical ecology: using the past to manage for the future. Ecological Applications 9(4):1189–206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wambolt, CL, Frisina, MR. 2002. Montana sagebrush guide. Helena, Montana, USA: Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks. 71 p.Google Scholar
West, NE, Young, JA. 2000. Intermountain valleys and lower mountain slopes. In: Barbour, MG, Billings, WD, editors. North American Terrestrial Vegetation. 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p 255–84.Google Scholar
West, NE, Tausch, RJ, Rea, KH, Tueller, PT. 1978. Taxonomic determination, distribution, and ecological indicator values of sagebrush within the pinyon-juniper woodlands of the Great Basin. Journal of Range Management 31(2):8792.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westerling, AL, Gershunov, A, Brown, TJ, Cayan, DR, Dettinger, MD. 2003. Climate and wildfire in the western United States. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 84(5):595604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westerling, AL, Hidalgo, HG, Cayan, DR, Swetnam, TW. 2006. Warming and earlier spring increase western US forest wildfire activity. Science 313(5789):940–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wigley, TML, Briffa, KR, Jones, PD. 1984. On the average value of correlated time series, with applications in dendroclimatology and hydrometeorology. Journal of Climate and Applied Meteorology 23(2):201–13.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wisdom, MJ, Rowland, MM, Suring, LH, Schueck, L, Wolff Meinke, C, Wales, BC, Knick, ST. 2003. Procedures for regional assessment of habitats for species of conservation concern in the sagebrush ecosystem. March 2003 Report, Version 1, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1401 Gekeler Lane, La Grande, Oregon 97850, USA.Google Scholar
Worbes, M, Junk, WJ. 1989. Dating tropical trees by means of 14C from bomb tests. Ecology 70(2):503–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar