4.2 Article

Minimal Plant Responsiveness to Summer Water Pulses: Ecophysiological Constraints of Three Species of Semiarid Patagonia

Journal

RANGELAND ECOLOGY & MANAGEMENT
Volume 62, Issue 2, Pages 171-178

Publisher

SOC RANGE MANAGEMENT
DOI: 10.2111/08-196.1

Keywords

altered precipitation; hierarchy of plant responses; life forms; plant strategies; plant water relations

Funding

  1. Experimental Field of Rio Mayo
  2. Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Agropecuaria. Argentina
  3. Fundacion Bunge y Born [PICT 15124, PICT 00463/07]
  4. UBA [G044, G062]
  5. CONICET [PIP 5963]

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In arid ecosystems, a few large summer rains frequently differentiate wet years from dry ones. However, use of this additional water by plants has limited experimental evidence. We applied a 16-mm summer water pulse (12% of mean annual precipitation) to two plant communities of the Patagonian steppe, and compared responses of three dominant species, which can be ordered by decreasing xerophytism and increasing rooting depth arid summer activity: 1) colapiche, evergreen dwarf shrub (Nassauvia glomerulosa [Lag.] Don); 2) coiron amargo, evergreen grass (Stipa speciosa Trin. et Rupr.); and 3) neneo, drought deciduous shrub (Mulinum spinosum [Cav.] Pers.). Shallow-rooted species (S. speciosa arid N. glomerulosa), which use water from dry soil layers, showed a greater leaf water potential response to watering than deep-rooted species (M. spinosum). Leaf water potential response was greater and quicker in xerophytic species than in mesophytic ones (N. glomerulosa > S. speciosa > M. spinosum). However, this response only translated into leaf conductance and transpiration responses for coiron amargo, probably because the species with winter phenological cycle (N. glomerulosa) is less able to utilize Summer water inputs than species with a summer phenological cycle (S. speciosa). The lick of response of deep-rooted M. spinosum in leaf conductance, transpiration, arid photosynthesis may have been due to the high leaf water potential of control plants. Instead, in S. speciosa and N. glomerulosa net photosynthesis decreased below zero following watering, suggesting the start of growth pulses. The complex chain of plant processes triggered by rainfall, arid the constraints imposed to different species by rooting depth, phenology, and xerophytism, could explain the frequent low response to both large rainfall events and above-average rainfall years in this arid community. Our results Suggest that, paradoxically, water may be suboptimally used at local scales in and rangeland ecosystems.

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