4.6 Article

Hydraulically-vulnerable trees survive on deep-water access during droughts in a tropical forest

期刊

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
卷 231, 期 5, 页码 1798-1813

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17464

关键词

deep-water access; drought tolerance; drought-induced mortality; hydraulic vulnerability and safety margins; hydrological droughts; rooting depths; safety-efficiency trade-off; tropical forest

资金

  1. Next Generation Ecosystem Experiments-Tropics - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  2. NSF [1137366, 1046113]
  3. Indo-French Cell for Water Sciences on an IRD Fellowship
  4. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture, McIntire Stennis project [LAB94493]
  5. National Science Foundation award [2017949]
  6. National Center for Atmospheric Research - National Science Foundation
  7. Carbon Mitigation Initiative at Princeton University
  8. US National Science Foundation
  9. Emerging Frontiers
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences [1137366] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Deep-water access is an important mechanism for plants to survive drought, delaying dehydration and reducing mortality rates. Research shows that the extent of deep-water access in tree species is related to root depth, dehydration risk, and can help reduce mortality risk caused by drought.
Deep-water access is arguably the most effective, but under-studied, mechanism that plants employ to survive during drought. Vulnerability to embolism and hydraulic safety margins can predict mortality risk at given levels of dehydration, but deep-water access may delay plant dehydration. Here, we tested the role of deep-water access in enabling survival within a diverse tropical forest community in Panama using a novel data-model approach. We inversely estimated the effective rooting depth (ERD, as the average depth of water extraction), for 29 canopy species by linking diameter growth dynamics (1990-2015) to vapor pressure deficit, water potentials in the whole-soil column, and leaf hydraulic vulnerability curves. We validated ERD estimates against existing isotopic data of potential water-access depths. Across species, deeper ERD was associated with higher maximum stem hydraulic conductivity, greater vulnerability to xylem embolism, narrower safety margins, and lower mortality rates during extreme droughts over 35 years (1981-2015) among evergreen species. Species exposure to water stress declined with deeper ERD indicating that trees compensate for water stress-related mortality risk through deep-water access. The role of deep-water access in mitigating mortality of hydraulically-vulnerable trees has important implications for our predictive understanding of forest dynamics under current and future climates.

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