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Transpiration increases under high-temperature stress: Potential mechanisms, trade-offs and prospects for crop resilience in a warming world

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 44, Issue 7, Pages 2102-2116

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.13970

Keywords

climate change; drought; heat stress; lipids; plant cuticle; stomata; vapour pressure deficit; water viscosity

Categories

Funding

  1. Minnesota Department of Agriculture [138815]
  2. USDA NIFA Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station [MIN-13-124]

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As climate change intensifies, the frequency and intensity of high-temperature stress events are expected to increase, along with a global increase in evaporative demand. Studies have found that plants can increase transpiration rate in response to high-temperature stress, leading to a trade-off between latent heat dissipation and water conservation. Research is needed to investigate the mechanisms behind plant responses to high-temperature stress and design new crop varieties for enhanced productivity under warmer and drier climates.
The frequency and intensity of high-temperature stress events are expected to increase as climate change intensifies. Concomitantly, an increase in evaporative demand, driven in part by global warming, is also taking place worldwide. Despite this, studies examining high-temperature stress impacts on plant productivity seldom consider this interaction to identify traits enhancing yield resilience towards climate change. Further, new evidence documents substantial increases in plant transpiration rate in response to high-temperature stress even under arid environments, which raise a trade-off between the need for latent cooling dictated by excessive temperatures and the need for water conservation dictated by increasing evaporative demand. However, the mechanisms behind those responses, and the potential to design the next generation of crops successfully navigating this trade-off, remain poorly investigated. Here, we review potential mechanisms underlying reported increases in transpiration rate under high-temperature stress, within the broader context of their impact on water conservation needed for crop drought tolerance. We outline three main contributors to this phenomenon, namely stomatal, cuticular and water viscosity-based mechanisms, and we outline research directions aiming at designing new varieties optimized for specific temperature and evaporative demand regimes to enhance crop productivity under a warmer and dryer climate.

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