학술논문

Linking variation in intrinsic water‐use efficiency to isohydricity: a comparison at multiple spatiotemporal scales
Document Type
article
Source
New Phytologist. 221(1)
Subject
Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation
Biological Sciences
Ecology
Plant Biology
Environmental Sciences
Climate Action
Carbon
Carbon Dioxide
Carbon Isotopes
Climate Change
Droughts
Forests
Indiana
Plant Leaves
Soil
Spatio-Temporal Analysis
Species Specificity
Trees
Vapor Pressure
Water
anisohydric
climate change
dendrochronology
drought
isohydric
stable carbon isotope composition
vapor pressure deficit
water-use efficiency
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Plant Biology & Botany
Plant biology
Climate change impacts and adaptation
Ecological applications
Language
Abstract
Species-specific responses of plant intrinsic water-use efficiency (iWUE) to multiple environmental drivers associated with climate change, including soil moisture (θ), vapor pressure deficit (D), and atmospheric CO2 concentration (ca ), are poorly understood. We assessed how the iWUE and growth of several species of deciduous trees that span a gradient of isohydric to anisohydric water-use strategies respond to key environmental drivers (θ, D and ca ). iWUE was calculated for individual tree species using leaf-level gas exchange and tree-ring δ13 C in wood measurements, and for the whole forest using the eddy covariance method. The iWUE of the isohydric species was generally more sensitive to environmental change than the anisohydric species was, and increased significantly with rising D during the periods of water stress. At longer timescales, the influence of ca was pronounced for isohydric tulip poplar but not for others. Trees' physiological responses to changing environmental drivers can be interpreted differently depending on the observational scale. Care should be also taken in interpreting observed or modeled trends in iWUE that do not explicitly account for the influence of D.