4.7 Article

Leaf hydraulic distance is a good predictor of growth response to climate aridity within and across conifer species in a Taiga ecosystem

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 342, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2023.109710

Keywords

Taiga forest; Wood anatomy; Leaf hydraulic anatomy; Leaf pressure -volume curve; Branch radial growth

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Although inter-specific differences in hydraulic traits have been extensively studied, there is limited knowledge about the intra-specific hydraulic variability. In this field investigation on two dominant conifer species across an aridity gradient, it was found that the hydraulic distance from the bundle sheath to the stomata can predict the growth rate, and specialists are more sensitive to climate change than generalists.
Despite inter-specific differences in hydraulic traits at broad scale have been comprehensively studied, intraspecific hydraulic variability in situ is less well known. Which hydraulic traits can better predict whole-plant performance in field both within and across species remains largely ambiguous. In the study, we conducted a field investigation on branch radial growth, leaf and branch anatomical traits related to hydraulics, as well as leaf pressure-volume curve parameters of two dominant conifer species (Larix sibirica and Picea obovata) at four sites over an aridity gradient across the Altay Mountain range, which locates at the southern edge of Taiga ecosystem, one of the largest and the most sensitive terrestrial biomes to climate change. L. sibirica is a generalist deciduous conifer species, while P. obovata is a specialist evergreen conifer species. It was found that: 1) P. obovata showed ten times higher slope of branch radial growth (RGRbranch) fitted to aridity than L. sibirica; 2) the hydraulic distance from the bundle sheath to the stomata (DMC) can predict the growth rate both within and across species; 3) earlywood and latewood anatomies showed different relations to RGRbranch within and across species; 4) leaf saturated osmotic potential (psi sat) but not turgor loss osmotic potential (psi tlp) was significantly and positively related to RGRbranch within species. Our results support the hypothesis that specialists are more sensitive in growth to climate change than generalists. Further, the results highlight DMC as a pivotal role in water transport and associated carbon assimilation both within and across species in Taiga ecosystem, therefore at the core of the structural adjustments to climate change in this largest and the most sensitive terrestrial biome.

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