4.7 Article

Tropical dry forest trees and lianas differ in leaf economic spectrum traits but have overlapping water-use strategies

Journal

TREE PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 517-530

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpx135

Keywords

drought; leaf water potential; plant functional traits; plant hydraulics; tropical dry forest; water transport

Categories

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [11-582]
  2. NSF CAREER Award [DEB-1053237]
  3. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, Terrestrial Ecosystem Science (TES) Program [DE-SC0014363]

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Tree species in tropical dry forests employ a wide range of strategies to cope with seasonal drought, including regulation of hydraulic function. However, it is uncertain if co-occurring lianas also possess a diversity of strategies. For a taxonomically diverse group of 14 tree and 7 liana species, we measured morphological and hydraulic functional traits during an unusual drought and under non-drought conditions to determine (i) if trees have different water-use strategies than lianas and (ii) if relationships among these traits can be used to better understand how tree and liana species regulate diurnal leaf water potential (Psi(diurnal)). In this Costa Rican tropical dry forest, lianas and trees had overlapping water-use strategies, but differed in many leaf economic spectrum traits. Specifically, we found that both lianas and trees employed a diversity of Psi(diurnal) regulation strategies, which did not differ statistically. However, lianas and trees did significantly differ in terms of certain traits including leaf area, specific leaf area, petiole length, wood vessel diameter and xylem vessel density. All liana and tree species we measured fell along a continuum of isohydric (partial) to anisohydric (strict or extreme) Psi(diurnal) regulation strategies, and leaf area, petiole length, stomata! conductance and wood vessel diameter correlated with these strategies. These findings contribute to a trait-based understanding of how plants regulate Psi(diurnal) under both drought stress and sufficient water availability, and underscore that lianas and trees employ a similarly wide range of Psi(diurnal) regulation strategies, despite having vastly different growth forms.

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