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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Theoretical Biology Année : 2007

Analyzing growth components in trees.

Résumé

Observed growth, as given, for instance, by the length of successive annual shoots along the main axis of a plant, is mainly the result of two components: an ontogenetic component and an environmental component. An open question is whether the ontogenetic component along an axis at the growth unit or annual shoot scale takes the form of a trend or of a succession of phases. Various methods of analysis ranging from exploratory analysis (symmetric smoothing filters, sample autocorrelation functions) to statistical modeling (multiple change-point models, hidden semi-Markov chains and hidden hybrid model combining Markovian and semi-Markovian states) are applied to extract and characterize both the ontogenetic and environmental components using contrasted examples. This led us in particular to favor the hypothesis of an ontogenetic component structured as a succession of stationary phases and to highlight phase changes of high magnitude in unexpected situations (for instance, when growth globally decreases). These results shed light in a new way on botanical concepts such as "phase change" and "morphogenetic gradient".

Dates et versions

hal-00174688 , version 1 (25-09-2007)

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Citer

Yann Guédon, Yves Caraglio, Patrick Heuret, Emilie Lebarbier, Céline Meredieu. Analyzing growth components in trees.. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2007, 248 (3), pp.418-47. ⟨10.1016/j.jtbi.2007.05.029⟩. ⟨hal-00174688⟩
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