Free Access
Issue
Ann. For. Sci.
Volume 60, Number 5, July-August 2003
Page(s) 385 - 392
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/forest:2003030

References

  1. Amthor J.S., Respiration in a future, higher-CO2 world, Plant Cell Environ. 14 (1991) 13-20.
  2. Brooks J.R., Flanagan L.B., Ehleringer J.R., Responses of boreal conifers to climate fluctuations: indications from tree-ring widths and carbon isotope analysis, Can. J. For. Res. 28 (1998) 524-533.
  3. Buck A.L., New equations for computing vapor pressure and enhancement factor, J. Appl. Meteorol. 20 (1981) 1527-1532.
  4. Clark K.L., Gholz H.L., Moncrieff J.B., Cropley F., Loescher H.W., Environmental controls over net exchanges of carbon dioxide from contrasting Florida ecosystems, Ecol. Appl. 9 (1999) 936-948.
  5. Cook E.R., A time series analysis approach to tree-ring standardization, Ph.D. Watershed Management thesis-University of Arizona, Tucson, 1985.
  6. Cropper W.P., Gholz H.L., In situ needle and fine root respiration in mature slash pine (Pinus elliottii) trees, Can. J. For. Res. 21 (1991) 1589-1595.
  7. Dale V.H., The relationship between land-use change and climate change, Ecol. Appl. 7 (1997) 753-769.
  8. Draper N.R., Smith H., Applied Regression Analysis, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1981.
  9. Duever M.J., McCollom J.M., Hydrologic study within the Myakka River State Park, Ecosystem Research Unit, National Audubon Society, Final C-6415, Naples, 1990.
  10. Ernst K.A., Brooks J.R., Prolonged flooding decreased stem density, tree size and shifted composition towards clonal species in a central Florida hardwood swamp, For. Ecol. Manage. 173 (2003) 261-279.
  11. Ewe S.M.L., Sternberg L.d.S.L., Busch D.E., Water-use patterns of woody species in pineland and hammock communities of South Florida, For. Ecol. Manage. 118 (1999) 139-148.
  12. Ford C.R., Brooks J.R., Detecting ecosystem response to increasing river flow in southwest Florida, USA, For. Ecol. Manage. 160 (2002) 45-64.
  13. Foster J.R., LeBlanc D.C., A physiological approach to dendroclimatic modeling of oak radial growth in the midwestern United States, Can. J. For. Res. 23 (1993) 783-798.
  14. Foster T.E., Brooks J.R., Long-term trends in growth of Pinus palustris and Pinus elliottii along a hydrological gradient in central Florida, Can. J. For. Res. 31 (2001) 1661-1670.
  15. Fritts H.C., Dendroclimatology and Dendroecology, Quatern. Res. 1 (1971) 419-449.
  16. Fritts H.C., Tree Rings and Climate, Academic Press, London, 1976.
  17. Gholz H.L., Hendry L.C., Cropper W.P., Organic-matter dynamics of fine roots in plantations of slash pine (Pinus elliottii) in north Florida, Can. J. For. Res. 16 (1986) 529-538.
  18. Gholz H.L., Cropper W.P., Carbohydrate dynamics in mature Pinus elliotti var. elliottii trees, Can. J. For. Res. 21 (1991) 1742-1747.
  19. Grissino-Mayer H.D., Rosenberger M.S., Butler D.R., Climatic response in tree rings of loblolly pine from north Georgia, Phys. Geogr. 10 (1989) 32-43.
  20. Grissino-Mayer H.D., Butler D.R., Effects of climate on growth of shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata Mill.) in northern Georgia: A dendroclimatic study, Southeastern Geographer 33 (1993) 65-81.
  21. Grissino-Mayer H.D., Holmes R.L., Fritts H.C., The international tree-ring data bank program library version 2.1 user's manual, Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 1997.
  22. Hendry L.C., Gholz H.L., Aboveground phenology in north Florida slash pine plantations, For. Sci. 32 (1986) 779-788.
  23. Hogg E.H., Temporal scaling of moisture and the forest-grassland boundary in western Canada, Agric. For. Meteorol. 84 (1997) 115-122.
  24. Holmes R.L., Computer-assisted quality control in tree-ring dating and measurement, Tree-Ring Bulletin 43 (1983) 69-78.
  25. Huffman J.M., Judd W.S., Vascular flora of Myakka River State Park, Sarasota and Manatee counties, Florida, Castanea 63 (1998) 25-50.
  26. Keeley J.E., Population differentiation along a flood frequency gradient- physiological adaptations to flooding in Nyssa sylvatica, Ecol. Monogr. 49 (1979) 89-108.
  27. Langdon O.G., Growth patterns of Pinus elliottii var. densa, Ecology 44 (1963) 825-827.
  28. Little E.L., Dorman K.W., Slash pine (Pinus elliottii), including south Florida slash pine nomenclature and description, USDA Forest Service Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, Station Paper 36, Asheville, 1954.
  29. Megonigal J.P., Day F.P., Effects of flooding on root and shoot production of bald cypress in large experimental enclosures, Ecology 73 (1992) 1182-1193.
  30. Meinzer F.C., Andrade J.L., Goldstein G., Holbrook N.M., Cavelier J., Wright S.J., Partitioning of soil water among canopy trees in a seasonally dry tropical forest, Oecologia 121 (1999) 293-301.
  31. Mitchell R.J., Kirkman L.K., Pecot S.D., Wilson C.A., Palik B.J., Boring L.R., Patterns and controls of ecosystem function in longleaf pine-wiregrass savannas. I. Aboveground net primary productivity, Can. J. For. Res. 29 (1999) 743-751.
  32. Monk C.D., Successional and environmental relationships of the forest vegetation of north central Florida, Am. Midl. Nat. 79 (1968) 441-457.
  33. Monserud R.A., Time-series analyses of tree-ring chronologies, For. Sci. 32 (1986) 349-372.
  34. Myers N., Mittermeier R.A., Mittermeier C.G., daFonseca G., Kent J., Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities, Nature 403 (2000) 853-858.
  35. NOAA, U.S. National/State/Divisional Data, Florida Region 4 precipitation, 1999.
  36. NOAA, GHCN Max/Min Temperature, Arcadia FL 27.23N 81.85W, 1999.
  37. Parker A.J., Parker K.C., Faust T.D., Fuller M.M., The effects of climatic variability on radial growth of two varieties of sand pine (Pinus clausa) in Florida, USA, Ann. For. Sci. 58 (2001) 333-350.
  38. Phipps R.L., Simulation of wetlands forest vegetation dynamics, Ecol. Model. 7 (1979) 257-288.
  39. Ross M., An action plan to conserve the native plants of Florida, Southeast Environmental Research Program (SERP), Florida International University and Center for Plant Conservation, Miami/ St. Louis, 1995.
  40. Schweingruber F.H., Eckstein D., Serre-Bachet F., Braker O.U., Identification, presentation, and interpretation of event years and pointer years in dendrochronology, Dendrochronologia 8 (1990) 9-38.
  41. Shan J.P., Morris L.A., Hendrick R.L., The effects of management on soil and plant carbon sequestration in slash pine plantations, J. Appl. Ecol. 38 (2001) 932-941.
  42. Stokes M.A., Smiley T.L., An Introduction to Tree-ring Dating, The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1968.
  43. Sun G., Riekerk H., Korhnak L.V., Ground-water table rise after forest harvesting on cypress-pine flatwoods in Florida, Wetlands 20 (2000) 101-112.
  44. Sun H., Furbish D.J., Annual precipitation and river discharges in Florida in response to El Ni no- and La Ni na-sea surface temperature anomalies, J. Hydrol. 199 (1997) 74-87.
  45. USGS, Historical streamflow daily values for Myakka River near Sarasota Fl (02298830), 1999.
  46. West D.C., Doyle T.W., Tharp M.L., Beauchamp J.J., Platt W.J., Downing D.J., Recent growth increases in old-growth longleaf pine, Can. J. For. Res. 23 (1993) 846-853.
  47. White E.H., Pritchett W.L., Water table control and fertilization for pine production in the flatwoods, Tech. Bull. Fla. Agric. Exp. Stn. (1970) No. 743.
  48. Yamaguchi D.K., A simple method for cross-dating increment cores from living trees, Can. J. For. Res. 21 (1991) 414-416.

Abstract

Copyright INRA, EDP Sciences