Plasticity in leaf-level water relations of tropical rainforest trees in response to experimental drought

Oliver Binks, Patrick Meir, Lucy Rowland, Antonio Carlos Lola da Costa, S Vasconcelos, Alex AR de Oliveira, Leandro Ferreira, B Christoffersen, Andrea Nardini, Maurizio Mencuccini

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The tropics are predicted to become warmer and drier, and understanding the sensitivity of tree species to drought is important for characterizing the risk to forests of climate change. This study makes use of a long-term drought experiment in the Amazon rainforest to evaluate the role of leaf-level water relations, leaf anatomy and their plasticity in response to drought in six tree genera. The variables (osmotic potential at full turgor, turgor loss point, capacitance, elastic modulus, relative water content and saturated water content) were compared between seasons and between plots (control and through-fall exclusion) enabling a comparison between short- and long-term plasticity in traits. Leaf anatomical traits were correlated with water relation parameters to determine whether water relations differed among tissues. The key findings were: osmotic adjustment occurred in response to the long-term drought treatment; species resistant to drought stress showed less osmotic adjustment than drought-sensitive species; and water relation traits were correlated with tissue properties, especially the thickness of the abaxial epidermis and the spongy mesophyll. These findings demonstrate that cell-level water relation traits can acclimate to long-term water stress, and highlight the limitations of extrapolating the results of short-term studies to temporal scales associated with climate change.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)477-488pp
    JournalNew Phytologist
    Volume211
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016

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