4.5 Article

Seasonal variation in photosynthesis in six woody species with different leaf phenology in a valley savanna in southwestern China

Journal

TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 631-643

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00468-007-0156-9

Keywords

drought; photoinhibition; photoprotection; spectral reflectance; stomatal limitation; delta C-13

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During 2003-2005, we examined the effect of seasonal drought on water status, gas exchange, delta C-13, chlorophyll fluorescence and spectral reflectance in six woody species in a valley savanna near the Yuanjiang River (the upper Red River) in southwestern China. Three different phenological types of these woody species were compared, i.e., an evergreen species, Cyclobalanopsis helferiana, two winter-deciduous (WD) species, Buchanania latifolia and Symplocos racemosa, and three drought-deciduous (DD) species, Terminthia paniculata, Wendlandia tinctoria and Woodfordia fruticosa. We aimed to test the following three hypotheses: (1) the evergreen and WD species employ a drought avoidance strategy, whereas DD species employ a drought tolerance strategy; (2) the evergreen and WD species have a more economical water use strategy than the DD species and (3) the evergreen and WD species have a stronger photoprotection capacity through thermal dissipation than the DD species. At the end of a prolonged drought, the predawn leaf water potential (psi(pd)) in C. helferiana and S. racemosa dropped to ca. -0.8 MPa, whereas the psi(pd) in B. latifolia remained close to zero and DD species were leafless. In the rainy seasons, maximal photosynthetic rates of the evergreen (18.4 mu mol m(-2) s(-1)) and W. fruticosa (18.0 mu mol m(-2) s(-1)) were higher than those of the other four species (12.2-13.8 mu mol m(-2) s(-1)). The evergreen and WD species responded to drought by closing stomata and thus maintained a constant relative water content (RWC), which is a typical drought avoidance strategy; however, it is at the expense of carbon gain. DD species maintained a high photosynthetic capacity with a decrease in both stomatal conductance and RWC until the driest period, and then shifted from the drought tolerance strategy to the avoidance mechanism by shoot dieback. There was no significant difference in the means of delta C-13 across the phenological groups. The evergreen and WD species had stronger heat dissipation than the DD species in dry seasons. All species increased leaf spectral reflectance, probably because of degradation of chlorophyll as indicated by the leaf reflectance index, which should reduce light harvesting. All species showed a strong increase in the ratio of red to green spectral reflectance of leaves during dry seasons, indicating the accumulation of anthocyanin, which may contribute to screening sunlight and scavenging reactive oxygen species. Different responses to drought of savanna woody species with different leaf phenologies may facilitate the partitioning of resource use and hence their co-existence.

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