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Short-term water stress impacts on stomatal, mesophyll and biochemical limitations to photosynthesis differ consistently among tree species from contrasting climates
- Source :
- Tree physiology. 34(10)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Predicting the large-scale consequences of drought in contrasting environments requires that we understand how drought effects differ among species originating from those environments. A previous meta-analysis of published experiments suggested that the effects of drought on both stomatal and non-stomatal limitations to photosynthesis may vary consistently among species from different hydroclimates. Here, we explicitly tested this hypothesis with two short-term water stress experiments on congeneric mesic and xeric species. One experiment was run in Australia using Eucalyptus species and the second was run in Spain using Quercus species as well as two more mesic species. In each experiment, plants were grown under moist conditions in a glasshouse, then deprived of water, and gas exchange was monitored. The stomatal response was analysed with a recently developed stomatal model, whose single parameter g1 represents the slope of the relationship between stomatal conductance and photosynthesis. The non-stomatal response was partitioned into effects on mesophyll conductance (gm), the maximum Rubisco activity (Vcmax) and the maximum electron transport rate (Jmax). We found consistency among the drought responses of g1, gm, Vcmax and Jmax, suggesting that drought imposes limitations on Rubisco activity and RuBP regeneration capacity concurrently with declines in stomatal and mesophyll conductance. Within each experiment, the more xeric species showed relatively high g1 under moist conditions, low drought sensitivity of g1, gm, Vcmax and Jmax, and more negative values of the critical pre-dawn water potential at which Vcmax declines most steeply, compared with the more mesic species. These results indicate adaptive interspecific differences in drought responses that allow xeric tree species to continue transpiration and photosynthesis for longer during periods without rain.
- Subjects :
- V-cmax
Physiology
Climate
mesophyll conductance
Plant Science
Deserts and xeric shrublands
Alnus
Trees
Quercus
DECREASED RUBISCO ACTIVITY
Photosynthesis
DROUGHT
Vcmax
Transpiration
Eucalyptus
Dehydration
J(max)
food and beverages
Forestry
Fraxinus
0705 Forestry Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Tree species
Stomatal conductance
Plant Biology & Botany
0607 Plant Biology
gas exchange
CO2 CONCENTRATION
Biology
hydroclimate
NONSTOMATAL LIMITATIONS
Jmax
Botany
SPECIFICITY FACTOR
LEAVES
drought sensitivity
DIFFUSION CONDUCTANCE
Science & Technology
model
0602 Ecology
fungi
Water stress
Plant Transpiration
Interspecific competition
Plant Leaves
Agronomy
stomatal conductance
Plant Stomata
Mesophyll Cells
GAS-EXCHANGE
RESPONSES
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17584469
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Tree physiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....60a9a9c2fea25180eb06e0c39ed5e70a