4.7 Article

Response of Leaf Traits of Eastern Qinghai-Tibetan Broad-Leaved Woody Plants to Climatic Factors

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.679726

关键词

climate; functional tradeoff; leaf morphology; leaf stoichiometry pattern; Qinghai-Tibet Plateau; specific leaf area; stomatal density; stomatal pore area index

资金

  1. Project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770448, 31770584, 31870411]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC0504801, 2018YFD0502401]
  3. Science and Technology Support Project of Department of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of Gansu Province [HTGSZYTCZCJC18027/02]
  4. Science and Technology Support Project of Ecological Grassland Restoration and Management in Gansu Province [202072]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The research found that temperature is the strongest factor influencing leaf traits, affecting leaf size, shape, stomatal structure, and chemical composition, indicating the important role of local heat quantity in determining variations in leaf morphology and biochemical properties. Additionally, the effects of precipitation and humidity on leaf growth were mainly through their impact on leaf traits related to plant water-use physiological processes.
Plant ecologists have long been interested in quantifying how leaf traits vary with climate factors, but there is a paucity of knowledge on these relationships given a large number of the relevant leaf traits and climate factors to be considered. We examined the responses of 11 leaf traits (including leaf morphology, stomatal structure and chemical properties) to eight common climate factors for 340 eastern Qinghai-Tibetan woody species. We showed temperature as the strongest predictor of leaf size and shape, stomatal size and form, and leaf nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations, implying the important role of local heat quantity in determining the variation in the cell- or organ-level leaf morphology and leaf biochemical properties. The effects of moisture-related climate factors (including precipitation and humidity) on leaf growth were mainly through variability in leaf traits (e.g., specific leaf area and stomatal density) related to plant water-use physiological processes. In contrast, sunshine hours affected mainly cell- and organ-level leaf size and shape, with plants developing small/narrow leaves and stomata to decrease leaf damage and water loss under prolonged solar radiation. Moreover, two sets of significant leaf trait-climate relationships, i.e., the leaf/stomata size traits co-varying with temperature, and the water use-related leaf traits co-varying with precipitation, were obtained when analyzing multi-trait relationships, suggesting these traits as good indicators of climate gradients. Our findings contributed evidence to enhance understanding of the regional patterns in leaf trait variation and its environmental determinants.

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