4.5 Article

The effect of drought on plant water use efficiency of nine NAD-ME and nine NADP-ME Australian C-4 grasses

Journal

FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 11, Pages 1337-1348

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/FP02056

Keywords

C-4 photosynthesis; drought; water use efficiency; delta C-13; delta O-18

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We investigated the response to drought of nine NAD-malic enzyme (NAD-ME) and nine NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) C-4 grasses. Species were grown from seeds in potted soil in a glasshouse. Seedlings were either watered regularly or exposed to two successive drying cycles of 8-10 d each, after which plants were harvested. Under well-watered conditions, average water use efficiency (WUE; dry mass gain per unit water transpired) was similar for NAD-ME and NADP-ME C-4 grasses, and ranged between 6.0 and 8.7 g dry mass kg(-1) H2O. Drought enhanced WUE of most species, but to a significantly greater extent in NAD-ME (1.20-fold) than NADP-ME (1.11-fold) grasses. Inhibition of dry matter accumulation (average of 12%) and shoot elongation under drought was similar among the C-4 grasses. Leaf dry matter carbon (delta(13)C) and oxygen (delta(18)O) isotope compositions were significantly different between the two C-4 subtypes. Leaf delta(13)C averaged -13.3 and -12.2parts per thousand, and leaf delta(18)O averaged 26.0 and 26.9parts per thousand in well-watered NAD-ME and NADP-ME grasses, respectively. Drought significantly reduced leaf delta(13)C in most C-4 grasses by an average 0.5parts per thousand. Leaf delta(18)O was not significantly affected by drought, indicating that leaf delta(18)O does not reflect drought-induced changes in leaf transpiration of C-4 grasses. In the experiment reported here, NAD-ME grasses increased their WUE under drought to a greater extent than their NADP-ME counterparts. Increased WUE of the C-4 grasses under drought was primarily related to control of water loss relative to carbon gain at the leaf, rather than the plant, level.

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