4.7 Article

Transpiration efficiency of a tropical pioneer tree (Ficus insipida) in relation to soil fertility

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 58, Issue 13, Pages 3549-3566

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erm201

Keywords

carbon isotope; oxygen isotope; soil fertility; transpiration efficiency; tropical tree

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The response of whole-plant water-use efficiency, termed transpiration efficiency (TE) to variation in soil fertility was assessed in a tropical pioneer tree, Ficus insipida Willd. Measurements of stable isotope ratios (delta C-13, delta O-18, delta N-15), elemental concentrations (C, N, P), plant growth, instantaneous leaf gas exchange, and whole-plant water use were used to analyse the mechanisms controlling TE. Plants were grown individually in 19 l pots with non-limiting soil moisture. Soil fertility was altered by mixing soil with varying proportions of rice husks, and applying a slow release fertilizer. A large variation was observed in leaf photosynthetic rate, mean relative growth rate (RGR), and TE in response to experimental treatments; these traits were well correlated with variation in leaf N concentration. Variation in TE showed a strong dependence on the ratio of intercellular to ambient CO2 mole fractions (c(i)/c(a)); both for instantaneous measurements of c(i)/c(a) (R-2=0.69, P < 0.0001, n=30), and integrated estimates based on C isotope discrimination (R-2=0.88, P < 0.0001, n=30).On the other hand, variations in the leaf-to-air humidity gradient, unproductive water loss, and respiratory C use probably played only minor roles in modulating TE in the face of variable soil fertility. The pronounced variation in TE resulted from a combination of the strong response of c(i)/c(a) to leaf N, and inherently high values of c(i)/c(a) for this tropical tree species; these two factors conspired to cause a 4-fold variation among treatments in (1-c(i)/c(a)), the term that actually modifies TE. Results suggest that variation in plant N status could have important implications for the coupling between C and water exchange in tropical forest trees.

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