4.6 Article

Leaf out time correlates with wood anatomy across large geographic scales and within local communities

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 235, Issue 3, Pages 953-964

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.18041

Keywords

freezing-induced embolism; leaf out; leaf phenology; vascular phenology; vessel; wood porosity; xylem

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Funding

  1. NSF [IOS: 1656318]
  2. Sinnott Award (Arnold Arboretum)

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There is a correlation between leaf out timing and wood anatomy in species, regardless of their geographic origin and phylogenetic relationships. Species with wider vessels tend to have later leaf out, especially the ring-porous species. This correlation may be attributed to the developmental and physiological links between leaves and wood or a larger safety efficiency trade-off.
There is a long-standing idea that the timing of leaf production in seasonally cold climates is linked to xylem anatomy, specifically vessel diameter because of the hydraulic requirements of expanding leaves. We tested for a relationship between the timing of leaf out and vessel diameter in 220 plants in three common gardens accounting for species' phylogenetic relationships. We investigated how vessel diameter related to wood porosity, plant height and leaf length. We also used dye perfusion tests to determine whether plants relied on xylem produced during the previous growing season at the time of leaf out. In all three gardens, there was later leaf out in species with wider vessels. Ring-porous species had the widest vessels, exhibited latest leaf out and relied less on xylem made during the previous growing season than diffuse-porous species. Wood anatomy and leaf phenology did not exhibit a phylogenetic signal. The timing of leaf out is correlated with wood anatomy across species regardless of species' geographic origin and phylogenetic relationships. This correlation could be a result of developmental and physiological links between leaves and wood or tied to a larger safety efficiency trade-off.

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