4.8 Review

Systemic effects of rising atmospheric vapor pressure deficit on plant physiology and productivity

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 9, Pages 1704-1720

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15548

Keywords

climate change; food security; meta‐ analysis; plant acclimation; stomatal conductance; vapor pressure deficit

Funding

  1. Minnesota Soybean Research & Promotion Council [00070622, 00078080]
  2. Minnesota Department of Agriculture [138815]
  3. Minnesota Wheat Research & Promotion Council [00070003, 00076909]
  4. USDA NIFA-Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station [MIN-13-124]
  5. Research School of Biology - ANU
  6. United States Department of Energy [DE-SC0012704]
  7. NSERC Discovery Program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Earth is currently experiencing a global increase in atmospheric vapor pressure deficit, which is expected to continue due to climate warming. This increase has been linked to decreases in ecosystem productivity and crop yield, attributed to photosynthetic limitations from reduced stomatal conductance. The long-term increase in vapor pressure deficit suggests that stomatal acclimation may play an important role in determining plant productivity under high vapor pressure deficit. The effects of elevated vapor pressure deficit on plant physiology are complex and far-reaching, involving anatomical, biochemical, and developmental aspects that vary across species.
Earth is currently undergoing a global increase in atmospheric vapor pressure deficit (VPD), a trend which is expected to continue as climate warms. This phenomenon has been associated with productivity decreases in ecosystems and yield penalties in crops, with these losses attributed to photosynthetic limitations arising from decreased stomatal conductance. Such VPD increases, however, have occurred over decades, which raises the possibility that stomatal acclimation to VPD plays an important role in determining plant productivity under high VPD. Furthermore, evidence points to more far-ranging and complex effects of elevated VPD on plant physiology, extending to the anatomical, biochemical, and developmental levels, which could vary substantially across species. Because these complex effects are typically not considered in modeling frameworks, we conducted a quantitative literature review documenting temperature-independent VPD effects on 112 species and 59 traits and physiological variables, in order to develop an integrated and mechanistic physiological framework. We found that VPD increase reduced yield and primary productivity, an effect that was partially mediated by stomatal acclimation, and also linked with changes in leaf anatomy, nutrient, and hormonal status. The productivity decrease was also associated with negative effects on reproductive development, and changes in architecture and growth rates that could decrease the evaporative surface or minimize embolism risk. Cross-species quantitative relationships were found between levels of VPD increase and trait responses, and we found differences across plant groups, indicating that future VPD impacts will depend on community assembly and crop functional diversity. Our analysis confirms predictions arising from the hydraulic corollary to Darcy's law, outlines a systemic physiological framework of plant responses to rising VPD, and provides recommendations for future research to better understand and mitigate VPD-mediated climate change effects on ecosystems and agro-systems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available