4.6 Article

Leaf hydraulic vulnerability to drought is linked to site water availability across a broad range of species and climates

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 114, Issue 3, Pages 435-440

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcu131

Keywords

Leaf hydraulic vulnerability; interspecific variation; drought; rainfall; aridity; climate change; species distribution

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council

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Background and Aims Vulnerability of the leaf hydraulic pathway to water-stress-induced dysfunction is a key component of drought tolerance in plants and may be important in defining species' climatic range. However, the generality of the association between leaf hydraulic vulnerability and climate across species and sites remains to be tested. Methods Leaf hydraulic vulnerability to drought (P50(leaf), the water potential inducing 50% loss in hydraulic function) was measured in a diverse group of 92 woody, mostly evergreen angiosperms from sites across a wide range of habitats. These new data together with some previously published were tested against key climate indices related to water availability. Differences in within-site variability in P50(leaf) between sites were also examined. Key Results Values of hydraulic vulnerability to drought in leaves decreased strongly (i.e. became more negative) with decreasing annual rainfall and increasing aridity across sites. The standard deviation in P50(leaf) values recorded within each site was positively correlated with increasing aridity. P50(leaf) was also a good indicator of the climatic envelope across each species' distributional range as well as their dry-end distributional limits within Australia, although this relationship was not consistently detectable within sites. Conclusions The findings indicate that species sorting processes have influenced distributional patterns of P50(leaf) across the rainfall spectrum, but alternative strategies for dealing with water deficit exist within sites. The strong link to aridity suggests leaf hydraulic vulnerability may influence plant distributions under future climates.

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