4.7 Article

Sex determines xylem anatomy in a dioecious conifer: hydraulic consequences in a drier world

Journal

TREE PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 11, Pages 1493-1502

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpx066

Keywords

dioecy; drought; hydraulic efficiency; hydraulic safety; Juniperus thurifera; xylem anatomy

Categories

Funding

  1. program 'Investments for the Future' Grant XYLOFOREST from the French National Agency for Research [ANR-10-EQPX-16]
  2. Agreenskills+ fellowship program (EU's Seventh Framework Programme) [FP7-26719]
  3. Russian Ministry of Education [5-100, M 2.2.3]
  4. Juan de la Cierva-Formacion grant from the Spanish MINECO [FJCI-2015-24770]

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Increased drought frequency and severity may reshape tree species distribution in arid environments. Dioecious tree species may be more sensitive to climate warming if sex-related vulnerability to drought occurs, since lower performance of one sex may drive differential stress tolerance, sex-related mortality rates and biased sex ratios. We explored the effect of sex and environment on branch hydraulic (hydraulic conductivity and vulnerability to embolism) and trunk anatomical traits in both sexes of the dioecious conifer Juniperus thurifera L. at two sites with contrasting water availability. Additionally, we tested for a trade-off between hydraulic safety (vulnerability to embolism) and efficiency (hydraulic conductivity). Vulnerability to embolism and hydraulic conductivity were unaffected by sex or site at branch level. In contrast, sex played a significant role in xylem anatomy. We found a trade-off between hydraulic safety and efficiency, with larger conductivities related to higher vulnerabilities to embolism. At the anatomical level, females' trunk showed xylem anatomical traits related to greater hydraulic efficiency (higher theoretical hydraulic conductivity) over safety (thinner tracheid walls, lower Mork's Index), whereas males' trunk anatomy followed a more conservative strategy, especially in the drier site. Reconciling the discrepancy between branch hydraulic function and trunk xylem anatomy would require a thorough and integrated understanding of the tree structure-function relationship at the whole-plant level. Nevertheless, lower construction costs and higher efficiency in females' xylem anatomy at trunk level might explain the previously observed higher growth rates in mesic habitats. However, prioritizing efficiency over safety in trunk construction might make females more sensitive to drought, endangering the species' persistence in a drier world.

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