4.5 Article

Water relations of evergreen and drought-deciduous trees along a seasonally dry tropical forest chronosequence

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 164, Issue 4, Pages 881-890

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-010-1725-y

Keywords

Groundwater; Resource partitioning; Stable isotopes; Water-use efficiency; Yucatan Peninsula

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-9981607, DEB-0615427, EF-0410408, DEB-0770 6813]
  2. University of California Institute for Mexico
  3. United States

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Seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTF) are characterized by pronounced seasonality in rainfall, and as a result trees in these forests must endure seasonal variation in soil water availability. Furthermore, SDTF on the northern Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, have a legacy of disturbances, thereby creating a patchy mosaic of different seral stages undergoing secondary succession. We examined the water status of six canopy tree species, representing contrasting leaf phenology (evergreen vs. drought-deciduous) at three seral stages along a fire chronosequence in order to better understand strategies that trees use to overcome seasonal water limitations. The early-seral forest was characterized by high soil water evaporation and low soil moisture, and consequently early-seral trees exhibited lower midday bulk leaf water potentials (I-L) relative to late-seral trees (-1.01 +/- A 0.14 and -0.54 +/- A 0.07 MPa, respectively). Although I-L did not differ between evergreen and drought-deciduous trees, results from stable isotope analyses indicated different strategies to overcome seasonal water limitations. Differences were especially pronounced in the early-seral stage where evergreen trees had significantly lower xylem water delta O-18 values relative to drought-deciduous trees (-2.6 +/- A 0.5 and 0.3 +/- A 0.6aEuro degrees, respectively), indicating evergreen species used deeper sources of water. In contrast, drought-deciduous trees showed greater enrichment of foliar O-18 (a dagger O-18(l)) and C-13, suggesting lower stomatal conductance and greater water-use efficiency. Thus, the rapid development of deep roots appears to be an important strategy enabling evergreen species to overcome seasonal water limitation, whereas, in addition to losing a portion of their leaves, drought-deciduous trees minimize water loss from remaining leaves during the dry season.

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