Is genetic diversity more important for terpene emissions than latitudinal adaptation? : Using genetically identical trees to better understand emission fluctuations across a European gradient
Är genetisk diversitet viktigare för terpen-utsläpp än anpassning till latitud? : Användandet av genetiskt identiska träd för att öka förståelsen för utsläppsfluktuationer läng med en europeisk gradient
Author
Summary, in English
It is fairly well known that BVOCs have an impact on the climate. However, whether the BVOC emissions have a warming or cooling effect on the overall climate is difficult to determine due to existing emission pattern variations both between individuals of the same species and between species. Some of the reasons which are often discussed to be influential and where there is relatively little data available are within-species genetic variation, stress response, adaptation to different weather and climatic conditions and seasonality. In this thesis, focus has been given to the importance of genetic diversity and adaptation to different growing conditions. Studies have been conducted on three European tree species with genetically identical individuals across a latitudinal gradient, stretching from Slovenia to southern Finland. The main results were that even though the emission amounts varied between sites due to differences in weather events, the progression of the growing season and insect outbreaks, the compound composition between individuals were similar both across latitudes and between measurement years. By showing compound composition stability for genetically identical trees, the results highlights the importance of taking genetic diversity into account in terms of observed emission pattern variations. The response to changing light conditions on the emission amount of different compounds was also investigated. The results uncovered that different compounds had different emission responses to changing light conditions, but that the response of the compounds were fairly similar across different species.
Department/s
Publishing year
2017-04
Language
English
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Lund University, Faculty of Science, Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
Topic
- Physical Geography
Keywords
- BVOC
- English oak
- European beech
- Norway spruce
- genetic diversity
- European gradient
Status
Published
Project
- Analysis of climate and seasonality impacts on species-specific BVOC emission capacities to improve a regional/global emission model
Supervisor
- Thomas Holst
- Guy Schurgers
- Riikka Rinnan
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 978-91-85793-82-2
- ISBN: 978-91-85793-81-5
Defence date
1 June 2017
Defence time
10:00
Defence place
Lecture hall “Pangea”, Geocentre II, Sölvegatan 12, Lund
Opponent
- Jaana Bäck (Professor)