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Dendroclimatological analysis of cedro (Cedrela fissilis L. - Meliaceae) for the reconstruction of recent environmental scenario from São Paulo, SP

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Author(s):
Gustavo Burin Ferreira
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Gregório Cardoso Tápias Ceccantini; Paulo Inácio de Knegt López de Prado; Jochen Schongart
Advisor: Gregório Cardoso Tápias Ceccantini
Abstract

Since the Industrial Revolution, fossil fuel consumption by man has been rising steeply. This way the concentration of greenhouse-gases (CO2, CH4 and NxO) rise too. That causes the climate to change, generating alterations in biotic and abiotic factors both in natural and urban environments. Some of these changes are typical from urban environments such as Urban Heat Islands and Thermal Inversion, and since great part of human population live in this type of environment, health problems are common. Thus it is important to know how the climate have behaved in this environments in the past years, and this is possible by analyzing the tree rings from urban trees. Furthermore, growth data can be used to calibrate forest dynamic models. Therefore the present work aims to build tree-ring chronologies of cedro (Cedrela fissilis L.) from the city of São Paulo, and to use them to reconstruct climate for the last century in this city, in addition to use these growth data to parameterize new elements in an existent forest dynamic model. For this, 43 individuals were sampled in 4 different sites in São Paulo, which were glued in wood support, sanded, dated, photographed and had their growth rings measured. Furthermore vessel area was measured for some predetermined rings. The growth rings widths were used to build chronologies, that were later used to generate climate reconstruction models. It was possible to fin relations between temperature and precipitation and the tree growth in 2 of the sampling sites, and in one it was possible to build reconstruction models for some months. With growth data, it was possible to parameterize a new equation inserted in Falster et al. Model, which inputs temperature effect in the photosynthesis-related part of the model. After inputting the new equation it was possible to observe changes in the periodicity of the recruitment cycles in this forest (AU)