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Título
Determination of bark production costs, a fireadaptive trait, in a Mediterranean pine species
Otros títulos
Determinación de los costes de construcción de la corteza, carácter de adaptación al fuego, en una especie de pino mediterráneo
Director o Tutor
Año del Documento
2025
Titulación
Máster en Ingeniería de Montes
Resumen
Bark thickness is a fire-adaptive trait in plants, influenced by environmental factors. In this study,
we use Pinus halepensis to study the production costs of bark, because even though this species
is an obligate seeder, recent studies showed that some populations could survive certain fire
regimens. In dry continental climates, P. halepensis populations require more time and resources
to develop the minimum basal bark thickness necessary for survival under moderately intense
fires. However, these populations do not reach a critical bark thickness at breast height. This can
increase the immaturity risk, dead by fire before establishing an aerial seed bank capable of
ensuring recruitment. Understanding ecotypic patterns, phenotypic plasticity, and relative
resource allocation to bark requires assessing the construction costs of bark and wood, which have
not been previously studied in trees. To address this, we collected bark and wood samples at breast
height and the tree base by a destructive analysis. The samples underwent carbon-nitrogen (C/N)
ratio analysis and ash/nitrate determination, as carbon concentration is a reliable indicator of
construction costs. Our results showed that, as expected, bark construction costs were higher than
wood. The construction costs of bark were also significantly higher than wood at the tree base.
Moreover, we observed significant differences among populations between the costs of wood and
bark, and in some cases, between breast height and the tree base. These findings highlight the
importance of studying resource allocation to key adaptive traits such as bark thickness.
Furthermore, our results confirm the importance of bark thickness in P. halepensis so
implementing silvicultural treatments to reduce immaturity risk under changing climatic
conditions is essential for the conservation and management of its populations, ensuring their
persistence. Este trabajo fin de máster trata sobre la determinación de los costes de construcción de la corteza y de la madera del pino carrasco, y la comparativa
entre ambos para poder conocer mejor los patrones ecotípicos de esta especie además de la asignación de recursos y la plasticidad fenotípica entre
diferentes poblaciones de toda la distribución natural de la especie, estudiando un caracter de la corteza como es su grosor y la propia corteza como
adaptación al fuego. La metodología empleada ha sido el análisis del ratio carbono nitrógeno por calcinación y la determinación de nitratos por
colorimetría, ya que el carbono es un buen indicador de los costes de construcción.
Materias Unesco
3106.08 Silvicultura
3106 Ciencia Forestal
Palabras Clave
Bark thickness
Fire adaptations
Life-history theory
Pinus halepensis
Resources allocation
Wood
Departamento
Departamento de Ciencias Agroforestales
Idioma
eng
Derechos
openAccess
Aparece en las colecciones
- Trabajos Fin de Máster UVa [6999]
Ficheros en el ítem
