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BackgroundReal-time monitoring of tree growth can provide novel information about trees in urban/suburban areas and the myriad ecosystem services they provide. By monitoring irrigated specimen trees we test the hypothesis that in trees with sufficient water, growth is governed by environmental factors regulating energy gain rather than by factors related to water use.MethodsInternet enabled, high-resolution dendrometers were installed on three trees in Southampton, NY. The instruments, along with a weather station, streamed data to a project web page that was updated once an hour. (https://ecosensornetwork.com). Growing periods were determined using a Hidden Markov Model based on Zweifel et al.’s (2016) zero-growth model. Linear models and conditional inference trees correlated environmental variables to growth magnitude and rate of growth.ResultsGrowth was governed by the interacting environmental variables of air temperature, soil moisture, VPD and took place primarily at night. Radial growth of spruce began April 14 after the accumulation of 69.7 °C growing degrees days and ended September 7th. Cedar growth began later (April 26th), after the accumulation of 160.6 °C and ended later (November 3rd). During the observation period, these three modest suburban trees sequestered 108.3 kg of CO2.ConclusionsThough irrigated, residential tree growth in our experiment was affected by environmental factors relating to both water use and energy gain through photosynthesis. Linking tree growth to fluctuations in environmental conditions facilitates the development of a predictive understanding useful for ecosystem management and growth forecasting across future altering climates. |