4.7 Article

Correlations between photosynthetic heat tolerance and leaf anatomy and climatic niche in Asian mangrove trees

Journal

PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 960-966

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/plb.13460

Keywords

heat stress; heat tolerance; mangroves; photosynthesis; T-50

Categories

Funding

  1. Guangxi University Start-up Fund
  2. Guangxi Provincial 100 Talent Grant
  3. University of Nottingham Malaysia campus Sustainable Societies Pump Priming Scheme 2021 [F0013.54.04]

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This study provides the first assessment of photosynthetic heat tolerance in 13 Asian mangrove species and reveals correlations with climatic niche and leaf traits. Mangrove trees exhibit high heat tolerance and a conservative evolutionary strategy in heat tolerance.
Photosynthetic heat tolerance (P-HT) is a key predictor of plant response to climate change. Mangroves are an ecologically and economically important coastal plant community comprised of trees growing at their physiological limits. Mangroves are currently impacted by global warming, yet the P-HT of mangrove trees is poorly understood. In this study, we provide the first assessment of P-HT in 13 Asian mangrove species, based on the critical temperature that causes the initial damage (T-Crit) and the temperature that causes 50% damage (T-50) to photosystem II. We tested the hypotheses that the P-HT in mangroves is: (i) correlated with climatic niche and leaf traits, and (ii) higher than in plants from other tropical ecosystems. Our results demonstrated correlations between P-HT and multiple key climate variables, the palisade to spongy mesophyll ratio and the leaf area. The two most heat-sensitive species were Kandelia obovata and Avicennia marina. Our study also revealed that mangrove trees show high heat tolerance compared to plants from other tropical ecosystems. The high P-HT of mangroves thus demonstrated a conservative evolutionary strategy in heat tolerance, and highlights the need for integrative and comparative studies on thermoregulatory traits and climatic niche in order to understand the physiological response of mangrove trees to climate change-driven heatwaves and rising global temperatures.

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