Atmospheric carbon dioxide [CO2] has increased dramatically within the current life spans of long-lived trees and old forests. Consider that a 500-year-old tree in the early twenty-first century has spent 70% of its life growing under pre-industrial levels of [CO2], which were 30% lower than current levels. Here we address the question of whether old trees have already responded to the rapid rise in [CO2] occurring over the past 150 years. In spite of limited data, aging trees have been shown to possess a substantial capacity for increased net growth after a period of post-maturity growth decline. Observations of renewed growth and physiological function in old trees have, in some instances, coincided with Industrial Age increases in key environmental resources, including [CO2], suggesting the potential for continued growth in old trees as a function of continued global climate change. © 2008 Institute of Botany, the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
CITATION STYLE
Phillips, N. G., Buckley, T. N., & Tissue, D. T. (2008). Capacity of old trees to respond to environmental change. Journal of Integrative Plant Biology. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7909.2008.00746.x
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