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Aridity drives clinal patterns in leaf traits and responsiveness to precipitation in a broadly distributed Australian tree species.

Authors :
Aspinwall, Michael J.
Blackman, Chris J.
Maier, Chelsea
Tjoelker, Mark G.
Rymer, Paul D.
Creek, Danielle
Chieppa, Jeff
Griffin‐Nolan, Robert J.
Tissue, David T.
Source :
Plant-Environment Interactions; Apr2023, Vol. 4 Issue 2, p70-85, 16p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Aridity shapes species distributions and plant growth and function worldwide. Yet, plant traits often show complex relationships with aridity, challenging our understanding of aridity as a driver of evolutionary adaptation. We grew nine genotypes of Eucalyptus camaldulensis subsp. camaldulensis sourced from an aridity gradient together in the field for ~650 days under low and high precipitation treatments. Eucalyptus camaldulesis is considered a phreatophyte (deep‐rooted species that utilizes groundwater), so we hypothesized that genotypes from more arid environments would show lower aboveground productivity, higher leaf gas‐exchange rates, and greater tolerance/avoidance of dry surface soils (indicated by lower responsiveness) than genotypes from less arid environments. Aridity predicted genotype responses to precipitation, with more arid genotypes showing lower responsiveness to reduced precipitation and dry surface conditions than less arid genotypes. Under low precipitation, genotype net photosynthesis and stomatal conductance increased with home‐climate aridity. Across treatments, genotype intrinsic water‐use efficiency and osmotic potential declined with increasing aridity while photosynthetic capacity (Rubisco carboxylation and RuBP regeneration) increased with aridity. The observed clinal patterns indicate that E. camaldulensis genotypes from extremely arid environments possess a unique strategy defined by lower responsiveness to dry surface soils, low water‐use efficiency, and high photosynthetic capacity. This strategy could be underpinned by deep rooting and could be adaptive under arid conditions where heat avoidance is critical and water demand is high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25756265
Volume :
4
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant-Environment Interactions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163396242
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pei3.10102