4.7 Article

Whole-plant versus leaf-level regulation of photosynthetic responses after partial defoliation in Eucalyptus globulus saplings

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 64, Issue 6, Pages 1625-1636

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/ert017

Keywords

Carbohydrates; carbon limitation; defoliation; leaf water potential; photosynthesis; plant hydraulic conductance

Categories

Funding

  1. Cooperative Research Centre for Forestry [1.2]

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Increases in photosynthetic capacity (A(1500)) after defoliation have been attributed to changes in leaf-level biochemistry, water, and/or nutrient status. The hypothesis that transient photosynthetic responses to partial defoliation are regulated by whole-plant (e.g. sourcesink relationships or changes in hydraulic conductance) rather than leaf-level mechanisms is tested here. Temporal variation in leaf-level gas exchange, chemistry, whole-plant soil-to-leaf hydraulic conductance (K-P), and aboveground biomass partitioning were determined to evaluate mechanisms responsible for increases in A(1500) of Eucalyptus globulus L. potted saplings. A(1500) increased in response to debudding (B), partial defoliation (D), and combined B&D treatments by up to 36% at 5 weeks after treatment. Changes in leaf-level factors partly explained increases in A(1500) of B and B&D treatments but not for D treatment. By week 5, saplings in B, B&D, and D treatments had similar leaf-specific K-P to control trees by maintaining lower midday water potentials and higher transpiration rate per leaf area. Whole-plant source:sink ratios correlated strongly with A(1500). Further, unlike K-P, temporal changes in source:sink ratios tracked well with those observed for A(1500). The results indicate that increases in A(1500) after partial defoliation treatments were largely driven by an increased demand for assimilate by developing sinks rather than improvements in whole-plant water relations and changes in leaf-level factors. Three carbohydrates, galactional, stachyose, and, to a lesser extent, raffinose, correlated strongly with photosynthetic capacity, indicating that these sugars may function as signalling molecules in the regulation of longer term defoliation-induced gas exchange responses.

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