Dendrochemistry in Public Health: A Case Study in North Carolina, USA
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Will trees be sampled within neighborhoods or from urban parks, or some combination of sampling sites?
- Will trees be sampled with or without consideration of locations of either sick individuals or of potential point sources of a contaminant?
- Will the sampling scheme include trees that might reasonably be considered as “controls”, in the sense that they are growing outside of the area of the public health problem [23]?
- How many trees will be sampled, recognizing the reality that the chemical measurement of tree rings is expensive and that it could cost thousands of dollars to measure rings of even just a single tree?
- What temporal resolution will be measured? Measuring at the annual scale would be costly, perhaps prohibitively, and individual rings might not provide enough wood biomass to confidently measure chemically. However, would a coarser time span (e.g., 2 years, 5 years, or decadal) adequately show changes through time in environmental chemistry?
- What chemical elements will be measured in the tree rings? It is not necessarily knowable ahead of time which elements should be of interest in urban settings [24].
- How will data analysis proceed in the search for element signals held across trees in the face of inter-tree variability, which can be high in dendrochemistry [25]?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Field Sampling
2.3. Lab Procedures
3. Results
4. Discussion
- Tree selection: Various principles exist for selecting trees for sampling in dendrochronology, ranging from random sampling for general purposes to the targeted selection of trees for specific objectives [62]. Dendrochemistry for public health research often involves sampling within local neighborhoods, including on private property, where selecting trees for study can be dictated more by logistical practicalities than by theoretical preferences of dendrochronological principles. In an ecologic study, the exact location of sample trees is not important, with the emphasis falling more on trees being generally representative of the area. In this study, loblolly pine is common and abundant; thus, that was the species of choice. Reasonably mature trees were selected so as to provide a time series as long as possible, acknowledging that urban trees are not likely to be very old, i.e., rarely older than 50 years. Chronologies of only a few decades in length would not be useful for dendroclimatological reconstructions, but changes in environmental chemistry might not otherwise be knowable back in time for even a couple decades; therefore, 50 years of dendrochemistry results could be quite useful.Regardless of the climate of a region, urban trees experience different soil moisture regimes across different residences or public parks, which cannot be controlled for and generally makes the cross-dating of growth rings across trees unlikely at the annual scale. A preferred scenario in dendrochemistry is that sampled trees have clearly visible, discernible growth rings with few if any periods of suppressed growth so that rings can be separated reasonably confidently and provide enough wood biomass to measure for element concentrations at what are bound to be trace levels.Urban trees also experience different soil nutrient regimes across different residences or public parks, which cannot be controlled for. Because of this, the raw concentration data of dendrochemistry might reflect variations unrelated to whatever public health issue is occurring. Normalizing data within each tree is especially useful in this case, as relative changes in abundance of any given element across time within each tree are emphasized.
- Site selection: Various principles also exist for selecting sites for sampling in dendrochronology, usually related to the broad objectives of a study, e.g., climatology [63], ecology [64], or geomorphology [65]. In ecologic studies for public health, no particular site should be more important than others, especially in the beginning phase of a study when there might not be a priori hypotheses about spatial variation in environmental chemistry. In particular, it is not necessary to aim for sampling sites to be near homes of people known to be sick or near specific industries thought to be emitting some contaminant or another. Therefore, site selection for public health studies is more a matter of optimizing the spatial density of sampling across a community or region. If possible, collecting more than one tree at any given location is useful for being able to assess inter-tree variability.
- Control trees: Collecting trees thought to be away from the area of concern in the public health sense should be useful for providing putative control samples, i.e., trees growing outside the sampling area of interest. However, without knowing spatial patterns of environmental chemistry ahead of time, it is difficult to know with certainty that any given area really will provide a study with control samples. It is possible that trees initially presumed to be controls in a study will be similar to trees located within areas of public health concern, which would mean that true control trees might not be collected in the initial field collection. In that case, multiple field collections would be necessary.
- Sample depth: Expectations in dendrochronology for the number of trees sampled and measured vary depending on the objectives and the type of measurements being made. Traditional ring-width applications of dendrochronology typically collect a lot of samples, e.g., many tens, if not hundreds, of trees [66]. However, collecting such high numbers of trees is not usually practical in dendrochemistry, in part because of having to sample in neighborhoods. Additionally, measuring tree rings chemically costs money and is expensive, and therefore, it is yet more impractical to measure many trees. Of course, some amount of sample replication is required in dendrochemistry in order to have confidence in the results (“entire [dendrochemistry] investigations based on a single tree … should be discouraged” [43]). Ideally, results from preliminary measurements on a few trees can suggest strategies for measuring more trees in subsequent analyses.
- Temporal resolution of measurements: Intuitively, it would seem obvious to measure tree rings at the annual resolution. Tree rings are mostly annual in formation, and most traditional ring-width applications of dendrochronology measure rings at the annual scale. However, once again, dendrochemistry is expensive due to the cost of measuring wood chemically, and thus, measuring even one tree core with even just 100 growth rings at the annual scale could cost several thousands of dollars, which would be hard to afford across multiple trees. Combining rings through time and measuring at coarser time scales would reduce costs per tree, thereby allowing for more trees to be measured. Environmentally, chemical changes might occur slowly through time anyway, in which case a coarser temporal resolution for the dendrochemical data should suffice in identifying something interesting.In this study, the decadal scale was a reasonable starting point for measurements. It appears that temporal patterns of environmental lead (Pb) are correctly demonstrated at the decadal scale, and thus, confidence should be reasonably high in the decadal values of other elements as well. If it were determined that a finer temporal resolution could help better pinpoint a moment of change in environmental chemistry, then additional samples are on hand for the measurement of shorter time increments.
- Chemical elements to be measured: It might seem logical to start a dendrochemical assessment of an area with illness with an a priori interest in elements known to be detrimental to human health. For example, in addition to lead (discussed in detail above), environmental exposure to arsenic [67], cadmium [68], and/or nickel [69] is of general concern in public health and, therefore, these elements are commonly measured in public health studies. However, without specific prior knowledge about exactly what elements might be elevated environmentally and could possibly be causing an illness, it would be wise not to restrict an initial survey of elements to just those known to have caused illness elsewhere. A broader survey of as many elements as possible might result in discovering something that would not otherwise be suspected of being elevated environmentally and/or causing an illness.
- Exploratory analysis of the data: For an initial analysis of dendrochemical data, time-series plotting of the concentration for all elements is reasonable for seeing if certain trees differ from others, which might indicate a temporal outlier period and/or a spatial “hot spot” (elevated values) for an element or multiple elements. This can be especially true when all measured trees are overlay plotted together on one plot for each element.As a next step in exploratory data analysis, normalizing concentration values within each tree and replotting in an overlay time series can be additionally edifying. Normalization puts all series on the same scale, making them easier to plot together and compare. Subtracting median values, as opposed to mean values, from each raw value is a conservative approach and avoids undue influence from large positive outliers, which occasionally occur in dendrochemistry measurements [70].
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sheppard, P.R.; Witten, M.L. Dendrochemistry in Public Health: A Case Study in North Carolina, USA. Forests 2022, 13, 1767. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13111767
Sheppard PR, Witten ML. Dendrochemistry in Public Health: A Case Study in North Carolina, USA. Forests. 2022; 13(11):1767. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13111767
Chicago/Turabian StyleSheppard, Paul R., and Mark L. Witten. 2022. "Dendrochemistry in Public Health: A Case Study in North Carolina, USA" Forests 13, no. 11: 1767. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13111767
APA StyleSheppard, P. R., & Witten, M. L. (2022). Dendrochemistry in Public Health: A Case Study in North Carolina, USA. Forests, 13(11), 1767. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13111767