4.4 Article

Spatiotemporal variation in leaf size and shape in response to climate

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 87-96

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtz053

Keywords

climate change; geographical patterns; herbarium specimens; leaf traits; paleo-climate reconstruction

Funding

  1. National Key Research Development Program of China [2018YFA0606104]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31988102, 31911530102]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences-Peking University Pioneer Collaboration Team

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Aims Morphological variation of leaves is a key indicator of plant response to climatic change. Leaf size and shape are associated with carbon, water and energy exchange of plants with their environment. However, whether and how leaf size and shape responded to climate change over the past decades remains poorly studied. Moreover, many studies have only explored inter- but not intraspecific variation in leaf size and shape across space and time. Methods We collected >6000 herbarium specimens spanning 98 years (1910-2008) in China for seven representative dicot species and measured their leaf length and width. We explored geographical patterns and temporal trends in leaf size (i.e. leaf length, leaf width and length x width product) and shape (i.e. length/width ratio), and investigated the effects of changes in precipitation and temperature over time and space on the variation in leaf size and shape. Important Findings After accounting for the effects of sampling time, leaf size decreased with latitude for all species combined, but the relationship varied among species. Leaf size and shape were positively correlated with temperature and precipitation across space. After accounting for the effects of sampling locations, leaf size of all species combined increased with time. Leaf size changes over time were mostly positively correlated with precipitation, whereas leaf shape changes were mostly correlated with temperature. Overall, our results indicate significant spatial and temporal intraspecific variation in leaf size and shape in response to climate. Our study also demonstrates that herbarium specimens collected over a considerable period of time provide a good resource to study the impacts of climate change on plant morphological traits.

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