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Variation in eucalypt bark allometry across Australia

期刊

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 70, 期 3, 页码 215-230

出版社

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/BT21150

关键词

Angophora; bark thickness; Corymbia; crown fire; ecosystem productivity; effective bark allometric coefficient; epicormic resprouting; Eucalyptus; fire regime; Myrtaceae; surface fire

资金

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [J4211-N29]

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This study examines the bark allometry of 52 Australian eucalypt species and finds that most species display negative bark allometry, with slower bark growth than expected. Fire type and net primary productivity are the main factors influencing bark allometry. The study also reveals that many eucalypt species have thinner bark compared to non-eucalypts due to unique bark bud traces that sustain post-fire resilience. This trade-off between thin bark and height growth contributes to the persistence and domination of eucalypts in Australia's flammable ecosystems.
Positive bark allometry (hyperallometry), characterised by rapid early bark growth, is expected where fire selects for thicker bark to resist cambial damage and topkill. We examine this prediction for 52 Australian eucalypt species. An effective bark allometric coefficient (alpha) was estimated from the first segment of breakpoint regression, which included fire-affected young trees. Eucalypts presented a negative-positive bark allometry continuum. Contrary to expectation, 73% of species (n = 38) displayed negative effective bark allometry. Early rapid bark growth was observed (alpha = 0.92 +/- 0.04, (x) over bar +/- s.e., n = 168 sites), but was slower than isometry and bark was thinner overall than expected. Fire type (crown-fire propensity) and net primary productivity (resource availability) most influenced bark allometry. Productive ecosystems experienced crown-fire and bark was thicker at standardised diameter ((x) over bar +/- s.e. = 2.04 +/- 0.20 cm) than in less productive ecosystems under surface fire ((x) over bar +/- s.e. = 1.68 +/- 0.18 cm). Bark morphology types did not differ in their stem diameter ((x) over bar +/- s.e. = 21.47 +/- 1.06 cm) or bark thickness ((x) over bar +/- s.e. = 1.88 +/- 0.08 cm) thresholds, representing putative stable alternative evolutionary solutions. Fundamentally, many eucalypts possess negative bark allometry with a relatively thin bark compared to non-eucalypts, because unique bark bud traces sustain post-fire resilience through epicormic resprouting. The resource allocation trade-off to thin bark v. height growth, selected by fire and resource limitation, accounts for eucalypt persistence and domination of Australia's flammable ecosystems.

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