4.5 Article

Gas exchange characteristics of giant cacti species varying in stem morphology and life history strategy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 105, Issue 10, Pages 1688-1702

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.1166

Keywords

Cactaceae; carbon isotope ratios; net assimilation rate; Sonoran Desert; stem economic trait spectrum; stem succulents; stem surface area to volume ratio

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Funding

  1. Binational Consortium for Regional Scientific Development and Innovation - National Council for Science and Technology, Mexico (CONACYT)
  2. University of Arizona's Agnese Nelms Haury Program in Environment and Social Justice

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Premise of the Study Methods Giant cacti species possess long cylindrical stems that store massive amounts of water and other resources to draw on for photosynthesis, growth, and reproduction during hot and dry conditions. Across all giant cacti taxa, stem photosynthetic surface area to volume ratio (S:V) varies by several fold. This broad morphological diversity leads to the hypothesis that giant cacti function along a predictable resource use continuum from a safe strategy reflected in low S:V, low relative growth rates (RGR), and low net assimilation rates (A(net)) to a high-risk strategy that is reflected in high S:V, RGR, and A(net). To test this hypothesis, whole-plant gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, and whole-spine-tissue carbon isotope ratios (delta C-13) were measured in four giant cacti species varying in stem morphology and RGR. Measurements were conducted on five well-watered, potted plants per species. Key Results Conclusions Under conditions of mild diel temperatures and low atmospheric vapor pressure deficit, A(net), transpiration (E), and stomatal conductance (G(s)) were significantly higher, and water-use efficiency (A(net) : G(s)) was lower in fast-growing, multi-stemmed species compared to the slower growing, single-stemmed species. However, under warmer, less optimal conditions, gas exchange converged between stem types, and neither delta C-13 nor chlorophyll fluorescence varied among species. The results add to a growing body of evidence that succulent-stemmed plants function along a similar economic spectrum as leaf-bearing plants such that functional traits including stem RGR, longevity, morphology, and gas exchange are correlated across species with varying life-history strategies.

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