Daily to decadal patterns of precipitation, humidity, and photosynthetic physiology recorded in the spines of the columnar cactus, Carnegiea gigantea
journal contribution
posted on 2018-08-17, 00:00authored byNB English, DL Dettman, DR Sandquist, DG Williams
Isotopic analyses of cactus spines grown serially from the apex of long‐lived columnar
cactuses may be useful for climatological and ecological studies if time series can be
reliably determined from spines. To characterize the timescales over which spines may
record this information, we measured spine growth in saguaro cactus over days, months,
and years with time‐lapse photography, periodic marking, and postbomb radiocarbon
dating and then analyzed isotopic variability over these same timescales and compared
these measurements to local climate. We used daily increments of growth, visible as
transverse bands of light and dark tissue in spines, as chronometers to develop diurnally
resolved d13C and d18O records from three spines grown in series over a 70 day period. We
also constructed a 22 year record of d13C variations from spine tips arranged in
chronological sequence along the side of a 4 m tall, single‐stemmed saguaro. We evaluated
two mechanisms potentially responsible for daily, weekly, and annual variability in d13C
values of spines; both related to vapor pressure deficit (VPD). Our data suggest that
stomatal conductance is unlikely to be the determinant of d13C variation in spines. We
suggest that either VPD‐induced changes in the balance of nighttime‐ and daytime‐
assimilated CO2 or mesophyll‐limited diffusion of CO2 at night are the most likely
determinant of d13C variation in spines. Intra‐annual and interannual variability of d18O in
spine tissue appears to be controlled by the mass balance of 18O‐depleted water taken up
after rain events and evaporative enrichment of 18O in tissue water between rains. We were
able to estimate the annual growth and areole generation rate of a saguaro cactus from
its 22 yearlong isotopic record because VPD, rainfall, and evaporation exhibit strong
annual cycles in the Sonoran Desert and these variations are recorded in the oxygen and
carbon isotope ratios of spines.