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Luomajoki, A. 1999.
Differences in the climatic adaptation of silver birch
(Betula pendula) and downy birch (B. pubescens)
in Finland based on male flowering phenology
Acta Forestalia Fennica 263. 35 p.
- Male flowering was studied at the canopy level in 10 silver
birch (Betula pendula Roth) stands from 8 localities and
in 14 downy birch (B. pubescens Ehrh.) stands from 10
localities in Finland from 1963 to 1973. Distributions of cumulative
pollen catches were compared to the normal Gaussian distribution.
The basis for the timing of flowering was the 50 per cent point
of the anthesis-fitted normal distribution. To eliminate effects
of background pollen, only the central, normally distributed
part of the cumulative distribution was used. Development up
to the median point of the distribution was measured and tested
in calendar days, in degree days (> 5 °C) and in period
units. The count of each parameter began on and included March
19.
Male flowering in silver birch occurred from late April to late
June depending on latitude, and flowering in downy birch took
place from early May to early July. The heat sums needed for
male flowering varied in downy birch stands latitudinally but
there was practically no latitudinal variation in heat sums needed
for silver birch flowering. The amount of male flowering in stands
of both birch species were found to have a large annual variation
but without any clear periodicity.
The between years pollen catch variation in stands of either
birch species did not show any significant latitudinal correlation
in contrast to Norway spruce stands. The period unit heat sum
gave the most accurate forecast of the timing of flowering for
60 per cent of the silver birch stands and for 78.6 per cent
of the for downy birch stands. Calendar days, however, gave the
best forecast for silver birch in 25 per cent of the cases, while
degree days gave the best forecast for downy birch in 21.4 per
cent of the cases. Silver birch seems to have a local inclination
for a more fixed flowering date compared to downy birch, which
could mean a considerable photoperiodic influence on flowering
time of silver birch. Silver birch and downy birch had different
geographical correlations.
Frequent hybridization of birch species occurs more often in
northern Finland in than in more southern latitudes. The different
timing in flowering caused increasing scatter in flowering times
in the north, especially in the case of downy birch. The chance
of simultaneous flowering of silver birch and downy birch so
increased northwards due to a more variable climate and also
higher altitudinal variations. Compared with conifers, the reproduction
cycles of both birch species were found to be well protected
from damage by frost.
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- Keywords
male flowering, timing of flowering, pollen catch, heat sum,
photoperiodism, adaptation, ecophysiological differences, seasonality,
hybridization, Betula
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- Author's address
The Finnish Forest Research Institute, Vantaa Research Centre,
FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland. Fax +358-9-85705711, E-mail alpo.luomajoki@metla.fi
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- ISBN 951-40-1713-7
ISSN 0001-5636
[ Acta Forestalia Fennica
]
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