Figure 1. δD (A,B) and δ18O (C,D) biases between Cavitron-extracted xylem water and CVD-extracted bulk stem water across all samples. Boxplots in (B) and (D) show the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75thand 90th percentiles.

Deuterium offsets between stem water and source water

We found large differences in the relationships between xylem water, bulk stem water and source water (Figure 2). While Cavitron-extracted xylem water aligned well with the source water line (Kolmogorov-Smirnov; p=0.945), CVD-extracted water plotted well below the source water line (Kolmogorov-Smirnov; p<0.01). The δD offsets of Cavitron-extracted water ranged from –6.5 to 5.5\($\textperthousand$\) (median –1.9\($\textperthousand$\)) and their mean was not significantly different from zero (t-test; p=0.458), while the δD offsets of CVD-extracted water ranged from –22.8 to –8.8\($\textperthousand$\) (median –15.5\($\textperthousand$\)) and their mean was significantly different from zero (t-test; p<0.01) (Figure 2b). Some stem water samples (both CVD- and Cavitron-extracted) were more enriched than any of the source water samples, which is likely due to our inability to extract soil water from shallow (i.e. evaporated) horizons. The similarity in slopes between all three trend lines (5.02, 5.06 and 4.86 for the source water, xylem water and bulk stem water lines, respectively) is a first indication that the CVD-induced δD offset may be independent of the δD composition of tree water.