4.7 Article

Conserved stomatal behaviour under elevated CO2 and varying water availability in a mature woodland

Journal

FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 700-709

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.12532

Keywords

drought; Eucalyptus tereticornis; instantaneous transpiration efficiency; photosynthesis; rising CO2; stomatal conductance; water-use efficiency

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Commonwealth Government
  2. University of Western Sydney (UWS)
  3. CSIRO
  4. UWS within the CSIRO Flagship programme 'Water for a Healthy Country'
  5. Australian Research Council (ARC)

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1. Rising levels of atmospheric CO2 concentration (C-a) and simultaneous climate change profoundly affect plant physiological performance while challenging our ability to estimate vegetation-atmosphere fluxes. To predict rates of water and carbon exchange between vegetation and the atmosphere, we require a formulation for stomatal conductance (g(s)) that captures the multidimensional response of stomata to changing environmental conditions. The unified stomatal optimization (USO) theory provides a formulation for g(s) with the ability to predict the response of g(s) to novel environmental conditions such as elevated C-a (eC(a)), warmer temperatures and/or changing water availability. 2. We tested for the effect of eC(a) and seasonally varying climate on stomatal behaviour, as defined by the USO theory, during the first year of free-air CO2 enrichment in a native eucalypt woodland (the EucFACE experiment). We hypothesized that under eC(a), g(s) would decrease and photosynthesis (A(net)) would increase, but fundamental stomatal behaviour described in the USO model would remain unchanged. We also predicted that the USO slope parameter g(1) would increase with temperature and water availability. Over 20 months, we performed quarterly gas exchange campaigns encompassing a wide range of temperatures and water availabilities. We measured g(s), A(net) and leaf water potential (Psi) at mid-morning, midday and pre-dawn (Psi only) under ambient and eC(a) and prevailing climatic conditions, at the tree tops (20 m height). 3. We found that eC(a) induced a 20% reduction in stomatal conductance under non-limiting water availability, enhanced mid-morning A(net) by 24% in three out of five measurement campaigns and had no significant effect on . The parameter g(1) was conserved under eC(a), weakly increased with temperature and did not respond to increasing water availability. 4. Our results suggest that under eC(a) and variable rainfall, mature eucalypt trees exhibit a conservative water-use strategy, but this strategy may be modified by growth temperature. We show that the USO theory successfully predicts coupling of carbon uptake and water loss in future atmospheric conditions in a native woodland and thus could be incorporated into ecosystem-scale and global vegetation models.

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