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1.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 23(23): 3868-74, 2009 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19902416

RESUMEN

Developments in continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry have made possible the rapid analysis of delta13C in CO2 of small-volume gas samples with precisions of < or = 0.1 per thousand. Prior research has validated the integrity of septum-capped vials for collection and short-term storage of gas samples. However, there has been little investigation into the sources of contamination during the preparation and analysis of low-concentration gas samples. In this study we determined (1) sources of contamination on a Gasbench II, (2) developed an analytical procedure to reduce contamination, and (3) identified an efficient, precise method for introducing sample gas into vials. We investigated three vial-filling procedures: (1) automated flush-fill (AFF), (2) vacuum back-fill (VBF), and (3) hand-fill (HF). Treatments were evaluated based on the time required for preparation, observed contamination, and multi-vial precision. The worst-case observed contamination was 4.5% of sample volume. Our empirical estimate showed that this level of contamination results in an error of 1.7 per thousand for samples with near-ambient CO2 concentrations and isotopic values that followed a high-concentration carbonate reference with an isotope ratio of -47 per thousand (IAEA-CO-9). This carry-over contamination on the Gasbench can be reduced by placing a helium-filled vial between the standard and the succeeding sample or by ignoring the first two of five sample peaks generated by each analysis. High-precision (SD < or = 0.1 per thousand) results with no detectable room-air contamination were observed for AFF and VBF treatments. In contrast, the precision of HF treatments was lower (SD > or = 0.2 per thousand). VBF was optimal for the preparation of gas samples, as it yielded faster throughput at similar precision to AFF.

2.
Tree Physiol ; 25(5): 557-62, 2005 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15741156

RESUMEN

Leaf longevity determines the annual cost of replacing foliage biomass and influences water and nutrient budgets. Longevity is readily estimated in most evergreen species by annual bud scars along the shoot. However, some species with indeterminate growth do not show these annual markers, making estimation of longevity difficult. One of these species is the widespread and economically valuable western red cedar (Thuja plicata J. Donn ex D. Don), for which no dependable estimates of leaf longevity exist. In this study, we estimated leaf longevity for western red cedar by counting growth rings in shoots at the point of leaf abscission. Estimates were obtained on 26 dominant or codominant trees growing in natural stands in a montane forest in northern Idaho, USA. Leaf longevity averaged 8.9 (SE = 0.2) years, but it strongly increased with depth in the canopy (0.3 year m(-1); mean crown depth was 15 m), increasing from a mean of 6.8 years in the upper third of the canopy to 10.6 years in the lower third. The increase in longevity with depth in the crown is consistent with many reports showing that longevity increases in resource-limiting environments. Longevity did not vary significantly with altitude or solar insolation in these montane forests. Among stand-level variables, longevity was correlated only with leaf area index: it increased slightly in stands with high leaf area indices. This approach to longevity estimation may be useful for any species that produces annual rings but no obvious bud scars, including many Cupressaceae species.


Asunto(s)
Altitud , Hojas de la Planta/fisiología , Luz Solar , Thuja/fisiología , Árboles/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos
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