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Root carbon and nutrient homeostasis determines downy oak sapling survival and recovery from drought

Authors :
Leonie Schönbeck
Arthur Gessler
Mai-He Li
Shengnan Ouyang
Xiaoyu Wang
Decai Gao
Marcus Schaub
Weijun Shen
Frank Hagedorn
Matthias Saurer
Source :
Tree Physiology, Tree Physiology, 41 (8)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2021.

Abstract

The role of carbon (C) and nutrient uptake, allocation, storage and especially their interactions in survival and recovery of trees under increased frequencies and intensities of drought events is not well understood. A full factorial experiment with four soil water content regimes ranging from extreme drought to well-watered conditions and two fertilization levels was carried out. We aimed to investigate whether nutrient addition mitigates drought effects on downy oak (Quercus pubescens Willd.) and whether storage pools of non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) are modified to enhance survival after 2.5 years of drought and recovery after drought relief. Physiological traits, such as photosynthesis, predawn leaf water potential as well as tissue biomass together with pools and dynamics of NSC and nutrients at the whole-tree level were investigated. Our results showed that fertilization played a minor role in saplings’ physiological processes to cope with drought and drought relief, but reduced sapling mortality during extreme drought. Irrespective of nutrient supply, Q. pubescens showed increased soluble sugar concentration in all tissues with increasing drought intensity, mostly because of starch degradation. After 28 days of drought relief, tissue sugar concentrations decreased, reaching comparable values to those of well-watered plants. Only during the recovery process from extreme drought, root NSC concentration strongly declined, leading to an almost complete NSC depletion after 28 days of rewetting, simultaneously with new leaves flushing. These findings suggest that extreme drought can lead to root C exhaustion. After drought relief, the repair and regrowth of organs can even exacerbate the root C depletion. We concluded that under future climate conditions with repeated drought events, the insufficient and lagged C replenishment in roots might eventually lead to C starvation and further mortality.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17584469 and 0829318X
Volume :
41
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tree Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a23d0af76d21c878a14ec12d264be68e