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Xylogenesis of compression and opposite wood in mountain pine at a Mediterranean treeline
Authors:Caterina Palombo  Patrick Fonti  Bruno Lasserre  Paolo Cherubini  Marco Marchetti  Roberto Tognetti
Institution:1.Dipartimento di Bioscienze e Territorio,Università degli Studi del Molise,Pesche,Italy;2.Snow and Landscape Research,WSL Swiss Federal Institute for Forest,Birmensdorf,Switzerland;3.Dipartimento Agricoltura, Ambiente e Alimenti,Università degli Studi del Molise,Campobasso,Italy;4.The EFI Project Centre on Mountain Forests (MOUNTFOR), Edmund Mach Foundation,San Michele all’Adige,Italy
Abstract:

Key message

Comparisons between compression and opposite wood formation in prostrating Pinus mugo indicate that the secondary meristem can produce more tracheids with thicker walls by also increasing the number of contemporaneously differentiating cells, rather than only increasing the duration or the rate of cell formation.

Context

Although cambium tissues within a stem experience the same climatic conditions, the resulting wood structure and properties can strongly differ. Assessing how meristem differently regulates wood formation to achieve different anatomical properties can help understanding the mechanisms of response and their plasticity.

Aims

We monitored the formation of compression (CW) and opposite (OW) wood within the same stems to understand whether achieved differences in wood structure are caused by modifications in the process of cell formation.

Methods

We collected weekly microcores of compression and opposite wood from the curved stem of ten treeline prostrating mountain pines (Pinus mugo Turra ssp. mugo) at the Majella massif in Central Italy.

Results

Results indicate that cambium formed approximately 1.5 times more cells in CW than OW, despite that CW cell differentiation only extended 2 weeks longer and the residence time of CW cells in the wall-thickening phase was only 20% longer. Differences in their formation were thus mainly related to both the rates and the width of the enlarging and wall-thickening zones (i.e., the number of cells simultaneously under differentiation) and less to duration of cell formation.

Conclusion

We conclude that to achieve such a different wood structures, the efficiency of the secondary meristem, in addition of altered rate of cell division and differentiation, can also modify the width of the developing zones. Thus, deciphering what rules this width is important to link environmental conditions with productivity.
Keywords:
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