4.6 Article

Optimal carbon partitioning helps reconcile the apparent divergence between optimal and observed canopy profiles of photosynthetic capacity

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 230, Issue 6, Pages 2246-2260

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17199

Keywords

canopies; optimality; photosynthesis; stomata; transpiration

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1557906, 1951244]
  2. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (Hatch project) [1016439, 2020-6701330913]
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences [1951244] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [1951244] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study found that shaded leaves have greater photosynthetic capacity per unit irradiance and smaller marginal carbon revenue of water compared to sunlit leaves, contradicting optimization theory. The model adjusted carbon partitioning, nitrogen partitioning, and leaf water potential to maximize carbon profit or canopy photosynthesis, revealing that shaded modules should have larger photosynthetic capacity per unit irradiance and smaller marginal carbon revenue of water. This was partly due to radiation-driven differences in evaporative demand and differences in hydraulic conductance arising from the need to balance returns on stem carbon investment between modules.
Photosynthetic capacity per unit irradiance is greater, and the marginal carbon revenue of water ( partial differential A/ partial differential E) is smaller, in shaded leaves than sunlit leaves, apparently contradicting optimization theory. I tested the hypothesis that these patterns arise from optimal carbon partitioning subject to biophysical constraints on leaf water potential. In a whole plant model with two canopy modules, I adjusted carbon partitioning, nitrogen partitioning and leaf water potential to maximize carbon profit or canopy photosynthesis, and recorded how gas exchange parameters compared between shaded and sunlit modules in the optimum. The model predicted that photosynthetic capacity per unit irradiance should be larger, and partial differential A/ partial differential E smaller, in shaded modules compared to sunlit modules. This was attributable partly to radiation-driven differences in evaporative demand, and partly to differences in hydraulic conductance arising from the need to balance marginal returns on stem carbon investment between modules. The model verified, however, that invariance in the marginal carbon revenue of N ( partial differential A/ partial differential N) is in fact optimal. The Cowan-Farquhar optimality solution (invariance of partial differential A/ partial differential E) does not apply to spatial variation within a canopy. The resulting variation in carbon-water economy explains differences in capacity per unit irradiance, reconciling optimization theory with observations.

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