Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis

In recent years an increasing number of studies have shown shrubs to be reliable proxies of environmental conditions in regions where Trees − due to harsh climate conditions − are absent. Although many shrubs are monoecious, some are dioecious, which poses certain questions related to gender-specifi...

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Published in:Dendrochronologia
Main Authors: Shetti, Rohan, Buras, Allan, Smiljanic, Marko, Hallinger, Martin, Grigoriev, Andrey A., Wilmking, Martin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-sex-matter-gender-specificity-and-its-influence-on-site-chro
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006
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spelling ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/536399 2024-04-28T08:27:29+00:00 Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis Shetti, Rohan Buras, Allan Smiljanic, Marko Hallinger, Martin Grigoriev, Andrey A. Wilmking, Martin 2018 application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-sex-matter-gender-specificity-and-its-influence-on-site-chro https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006 en eng https://edepot.wur.nl/446781 https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-sex-matter-gender-specificity-and-its-influence-on-site-chro doi:10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006 Wageningen University & Research Dendrochronologia 49 (2018) ISSN: 1125-7865 Basal area increment Boreal shrub Principle component gradient analysis Ring-width Sexual dimorphism Article/Letter to editor 2018 ftunivwagenin https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006 2024-04-03T15:20:23Z In recent years an increasing number of studies have shown shrubs to be reliable proxies of environmental conditions in regions where Trees − due to harsh climate conditions − are absent. Although many shrubs are monoecious, some are dioecious, which poses certain questions related to gender-specific growth as observed for trees in previous studies. Here, we address the questions whether dioecious shrubs, similar to trees, show growth differences between male and female plants, and − if so − whether this difference needs to be considered in terms of sample selection. We chose Juniperus communis. L., the most widely distributed woody plant, and a common and well-studied dioecious shrub species in the northern hemisphere, especially in the Boreal, Subarctic tundra and Alpine regions. Our samples were collected from four sites − three from the Ural Mountains and one site from Kirkenes in Norway. To see if there were differences in radial growth between sexes we performed four different analyses. First, we used multivariate explorative statistics to see if there were gender biased sub-populations and generally found no differences. Secondly, to compare growth over the lifetime of shrubs we computed cumulative annual increments of basal area which revealed no gender-specific growth patterns. Thirdly, to test if differences in radial growth between male and female shrubs affect the resulting site-chronology, we compared individual shrub chronologies with the site-chronology and found a significant differentiation between normalized correlations of gender-specific chronologies to the site-chronology. This significant difference was restricted to an overall comparison, but not evident at individual site-level. Lastly, we compared correlations of gender-specific chronologies and a mean site-chronology with monthly climate records to find only very few meaningful differences in their responses. In summary, we could not detect any clear gender-specific growth pattern in Juniperus communis but observed a trend towards more ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Kirkenes Subarctic Tundra ural mountains Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library Dendrochronologia 49 118 126
institution Open Polar
collection Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivwagenin
language English
topic Basal area increment
Boreal shrub
Principle component gradient analysis
Ring-width
Sexual dimorphism
spellingShingle Basal area increment
Boreal shrub
Principle component gradient analysis
Ring-width
Sexual dimorphism
Shetti, Rohan
Buras, Allan
Smiljanic, Marko
Hallinger, Martin
Grigoriev, Andrey A.
Wilmking, Martin
Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
topic_facet Basal area increment
Boreal shrub
Principle component gradient analysis
Ring-width
Sexual dimorphism
description In recent years an increasing number of studies have shown shrubs to be reliable proxies of environmental conditions in regions where Trees − due to harsh climate conditions − are absent. Although many shrubs are monoecious, some are dioecious, which poses certain questions related to gender-specific growth as observed for trees in previous studies. Here, we address the questions whether dioecious shrubs, similar to trees, show growth differences between male and female plants, and − if so − whether this difference needs to be considered in terms of sample selection. We chose Juniperus communis. L., the most widely distributed woody plant, and a common and well-studied dioecious shrub species in the northern hemisphere, especially in the Boreal, Subarctic tundra and Alpine regions. Our samples were collected from four sites − three from the Ural Mountains and one site from Kirkenes in Norway. To see if there were differences in radial growth between sexes we performed four different analyses. First, we used multivariate explorative statistics to see if there were gender biased sub-populations and generally found no differences. Secondly, to compare growth over the lifetime of shrubs we computed cumulative annual increments of basal area which revealed no gender-specific growth patterns. Thirdly, to test if differences in radial growth between male and female shrubs affect the resulting site-chronology, we compared individual shrub chronologies with the site-chronology and found a significant differentiation between normalized correlations of gender-specific chronologies to the site-chronology. This significant difference was restricted to an overall comparison, but not evident at individual site-level. Lastly, we compared correlations of gender-specific chronologies and a mean site-chronology with monthly climate records to find only very few meaningful differences in their responses. In summary, we could not detect any clear gender-specific growth pattern in Juniperus communis but observed a trend towards more ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Shetti, Rohan
Buras, Allan
Smiljanic, Marko
Hallinger, Martin
Grigoriev, Andrey A.
Wilmking, Martin
author_facet Shetti, Rohan
Buras, Allan
Smiljanic, Marko
Hallinger, Martin
Grigoriev, Andrey A.
Wilmking, Martin
author_sort Shetti, Rohan
title Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
title_short Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
title_full Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
title_fullStr Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
title_full_unstemmed Does sex matter? Gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub Juniperus communis
title_sort does sex matter? gender-specificity and its influence on site-chronologies in the common dioecious shrub juniperus communis
publishDate 2018
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-sex-matter-gender-specificity-and-its-influence-on-site-chro
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006
genre Kirkenes
Subarctic
Tundra
ural mountains
genre_facet Kirkenes
Subarctic
Tundra
ural mountains
op_source Dendrochronologia 49 (2018)
ISSN: 1125-7865
op_relation https://edepot.wur.nl/446781
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-sex-matter-gender-specificity-and-its-influence-on-site-chro
doi:10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006
op_rights Wageningen University & Research
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2018.03.006
container_title Dendrochronologia
container_volume 49
container_start_page 118
op_container_end_page 126
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