4.7 Article

Minimum hydraulic safety leads to maximum water-use efficiency in a forage grass

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 34, Issue 2, Pages 302-313

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2010.02244.x

Keywords

grass; hydraulic conductivity; production; safety margin; stomatal regulation; water stress; water-use efficiency; xylem vulnerability

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Fellowship
  2. Australian Research Council
  3. Dairy Australia Research and Development Scholarship
  4. Australian Postgraduate Award
  5. Tasmanian ICT Centre, CSIRO

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Understanding how water-use regulation relates to biomass accumulation is imperative for improving crop production in water-limited environments. Here, we examine how the vulnerability of xylem to water stress-induced cavitation and the coordination between water transport capacity and assimilation (A) influences diurnal water-use efficiency (WUE) and dry-matter production in Lolium perenne L. - a commercial forage grass. Plants were exposed to a range of water stresses, causing up to 90% leaf death, by withholding water and then rewatering to observe the recovery process. Leaf hydraulic conductance (K-leaf) declined to 50% of maximum at a leaf water potential (Sigma(leaf)) of -1 MPa, whereas complete stomatal closure occurred well after this point, at -2.35 MPa, providing no protection against hydraulic dysfunction. Instantaneous A remained maximal until > 70% of hydraulic conductivity had been lost. Post-stress rewatering showed that 95% loss of K-leaf could be incurred before the recovery of gas exchange exceeded 1 d, with a rapid transition to leaf death after this point. Plants exposed to sustained soil water deficits through restricted nightly watering regimes did not suffer cumulative losses in K-leaf; instead, Sigma(leaf) and gas exchange recovered diurnally. The effect was improved WUE during the day and optimal Sigma(leaf) during the night for the maintenance of growth.

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