4.6 Article

Is a seasonally reduced growth potential a convergent strategy to survive drought and frost in plants?

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 131, Issue 2, Pages 245-254

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcac153

Keywords

Dehydration tolerance; dormancy; growth-stress survival trade-off; embolism resistance; mortality threshold; phenology; fast-slow economics spectrum; seasonality; strategy; drought survival; frost survival

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This study proposes that winter and summer dormancy are important but often overlooked plant ecological strategies for survival in the face of dehydration stress. The review highlights the interdependence of reduced physiological activity, embolism resistance, and dehydration tolerance in determining plant mortality thresholds during severe frost and drought. The authors suggest that quantifying stress survival in non-dormant versus dormant plants can provide insights into the relationship between incomplete and complete dormancy and dehydration tolerance.
Background Plants have adapted to survive seasonal life-threatening frost and drought. However, the timing and frequency of such events are impacted by climate change, jeopardizing plant survival. Understanding better the strategies of survival to dehydration stress is therefore timely and can be enhanced by the cross-fertilization of research between disciplines (ecology, physiology), models (woody, herbaceous species) and types of stress (drought, frost). Scope We build upon the 'growth-stress survival' trade-off, which underpins the identification of global plant strategies across environments along a 'fast-slow' economics spectrum. Although phenological adaptations such as dormancy are crucial to survive stress, plant global strategies along the fast-slow economic spectrum rarely integrate growth variations across seasons. We argue that the growth-stress survival trade-off can be a useful framework to identify convergent plant ecophysiological strategies to survive both frost and drought. We review evidence that reduced physiological activity, embolism resistance and dehydration tolerance of meristematic tissues are interdependent strategies that determine thresholds of mortality among plants under severe frost and drought. We show that complete dormancy, i.e. programmed growth cessation, before stress occurrence, minimizes water flows and maximizes dehydration tolerance during seasonal life-threatening stresses. We propose that incomplete dormancy, i.e. the programmed reduction of growth potential during the harshest seasons, could be an overlooked but major adaptation across plants. Quantifying stress survival in a range of non-dormant versus winter- or summer-dormant plants, should reveal to what extent incomplete to complete dormancy could represent a proxy for dehydration tolerance and stress survival. Conclusions Our review of the strategies involved in dehydration stress survival suggests that winter and summer dormancy are insufficiently acknowledged as plant ecological strategies. Incorporating a seasonal fast-slow economics spectrum into global plant strategies improves our understanding of plant resilience to seasonal stress and refines our prevision of plant adaptation to extreme climatic events.

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