4.7 Article

Evaporative enrichment and time lags between δ18O of leaf water and organic pools in a pine stand

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 539-550

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2007.01654.x

Keywords

Pinus sylvestris; oxygen isotopes; Peclet effect; phloem sap; temporal variation

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Understanding ecosystem water fluxes has gained increasing attention, as climate scenarios predict a drier environment for many parts of the world. Evaporative enrichment of O-18 (Delta O-18) of leaf water and subsequent enrichment of plant organic matter can be used to characterize environmental and physiological factors that control evaporation, based on a recently established mechanistic model. In a Pinus sylvestris forest, we measured the dynamics of oxygen isotopic composition (delta O-18) every 6 h for 4 d in atmospheric water vapour, xylem sap, leaf water and water-soluble organic matter in current (N) and previous year (N-1) needles, phloem sap, together with leaf gas exchange for pooled N and N-1 needles, and relevant micrometeorological variables. Leaf water delta O-18 showed strong diel periodicity, while delta O-18 in atmospheric water vapour and in xylem sap showed little variation. The Delta O-18 was consistently lower for N than for N-1 needles, possibly related to phenological stage. Modelled leaf water Delta O-18 showed good agreement with measured values when applying a non-steady state evaporative enrichment model including a Peclet effect. We determined the time lags between delta O-18 signals from leaf water to water-soluble foliar organic matter and to phloem sap at different locations down the trunk, which clearly demonstrated the relevance of considering these time-lag effects for carbon transport, source-sink and carbon flux partitioning studies.

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