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1.
Plant Cell Environ ; 47(6): 1971-1986, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38372066

ABSTRACT

Despite the abundant evidence of impairments to plant performance and survival under hotter-drought conditions, little is known about the vulnerability of reproductive organs to climate extremes. Here, by conducting a comparative analysis between flowers and leaves, we investigated how variations in key morphophysiological traits related to carbon and water economics can explain the differential vulnerabilities to heat and drought among these functionally diverse organs. Due to their lower construction costs, despite having a higher water storage capacity, flowers were more prone to turgor loss (higher turgor loss point; ΨTLP) than leaves, thus evidencing a trade-off between carbon investment and drought tolerance in reproductive organs. Importantly, the higher ΨTLP of flowers also resulted in narrow turgor safety margins (TSM). Moreover, compared to leaves, the cuticle of flowers had an overall higher thermal vulnerability, which also resulted in low leakage safety margins (LSM). As a result, the combination of low TSMs and LSMs may have negative impacts on reproduction success since they strongly influenced the time to turgor loss under simulated hotter-drought conditions. Overall, our results improve the knowledge of unexplored aspects of flower structure and function and highlight likely threats to successful plant reproduction in a warmer and drier world.


Subject(s)
Droughts , Flowers , Hot Temperature , Plant Leaves , Reproduction , Flowers/physiology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Water/metabolism , Water/physiology
2.
Plant Cell Environ ; 46(3): 764-779, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36517464

ABSTRACT

The increase in frequency and intensity of drought events have hampered coffee production in the already threatened Amazon region, yet little is known about key aspects underlying the variability in yield potential across genotypes, nor to what extent higher productivity is linked to reduced drought tolerance. Here we explored how variations in morphoanatomical and physiological leaf traits can explain differences in yield and vulnerability to embolism in 11 Coffea canephora genotypes cultivated in the Western Amazon. The remarkable variation in coffee yield across genotypes was tightly related to differences in their carbon assimilation and water transport capacities, revealing a diffusive limitation to photosynthesis linked by hydraulic constraints. Although a clear trade-off between water transport efficiency and safety was not detected, all the studied genotypes operated in a narrow and/or negative hydraulic safety margin, suggesting a high vulnerability to leaf hydraulic failure (HF), especially on the most productive genotypes. Modelling exercises revealed that variations in HF across genotypes were mainly associated with differences in leaf water vapour leakage when stomata are closed, reflecting contrasting growth strategies. Overall, our results provide a new perspective on the challenges of sustaining coffee production in the Amazon region under a drier and warmer climate.


Subject(s)
Coffea , Coffea/genetics , Coffee , Plant Leaves/physiology , Phenotype , Photosynthesis/physiology , Droughts
3.
New Phytol ; 229(3): 1415-1430, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32964437

ABSTRACT

Plants continue to lose water from their leaves even after complete stomatal closure. Although this minimum conductance (gleaf-res ) has substantial impacts on strategies of water use and conservation, little is known about the potential drivers underlying the variability of this trait across species. We thus untangled the relative contribution of water leaks from the cuticle and stomata in order to investigate how the variability in leaf morphological and anatomical traits is related to the variation in gleaf-res and carbon assimilation capacity across 30 diverse species from the Brazilian Cerrado. In addition to cuticle permeance, water leaks from stomata had a significant impact on gleaf-res . The differential pattern of stomata distribution in the epidermis was a key factor driving this variation, suggesting the existence of a trade-off between carbon assimilation and water loss through gleaf-res . For instance, higher gleaf-res , observed in fast-growing species, was associated with the investment in small and numerous stomata, which allowed higher carbon assimilation rates but also increased water leaks, with negative impacts on leaf survival under drought. Variation in cuticle structural properties was not linked to gleaf-res . Our results therefore suggest the existence of a trade-off between carbon assimilation efficiency and dehydration tolerance at foliar level.


Subject(s)
Grassland , Plant Stomata , Brazil , Plant Leaves , Plant Transpiration , Water
4.
Front Plant Sci ; 10: 1718, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32038687

ABSTRACT

Bark is a structure involved in multiple physiological functions, but which has been traditionally associated with protection against fire. Thus, little is known about how the morpho-anatomical variations of this structure are related to different ecological pressures, especially in tropical savanna species, which are commonly subjected to frequent fire and drought events. Here we evaluated how the structural and functional variations of bark are related to the processes of resilience and resistance to fire, as well as transport and storage of water in 31 native species from the Brazilian Cerrado. Because of their thick bark, none of the trees analyzed were top-killed after a severe fire event. The structural and functional variations of the bark were also associated with water storage and transport, functions related to properties of the inner bark. In fact, species with a thicker and less dense inner bark were the ones that had the highest water contents in the wood, bark, and leaves. Lower bark density was also related to higher stem hydraulic conductivity, carbon assimilation, and growth. Overall, we provide strong evidence that in addition to protection from fire, the relative investment in bark also reflects different strategies of water use and conservation among many Cerrado tree species.

5.
Tree Physiol ; 31(7): 751-62, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21746745

ABSTRACT

Effects of soil and atmospheric drought on whole-tree transpiration (E(T)), leaf water potential (Ψ(L)) and whole-tree hydraulic conductance (K(T)) were investigated in mature rubber trees (Hevea brasiliensis, clone RRIM 600) during the full canopy stage in the rainy season in a drought-prone area of northeast Thailand. Under well-watered soil conditions, transpiration was tightly regulated in response to high evaporative demand, i.e., above reference evapotranspiration (ET(0)) ~2.2 mm day(-1) or maximum vapor pressure deficit ~1.8 kPa. When the trees experienced intermittent soil drought E(T) decreased sharply when relative extractable water in the top soil was < 0.4. The midday leaf water potential (Ψ(md)) on sunny days did not change as a function of soil drought and remained stable at approximately - 1.95 MPa, i.e., displaying isohydric behavior. The decrease in E(T) was mainly due to the change in K(T). K(T) remained constant over a wide range of environmental conditions and decreased sharply at low soil water availability. A simple hydraulic model incorporating critical minimum water potential and the response of whole-tree hydraulic conductance to relative extractable water correctly simulated patterns of transpiration over 6 months. We conclude that an explicit and simplified framework of hydraulic limitation hypothesis was sufficient to describe water use regulation of a mature rubber tree stand in water-limited conditions. Given the complexity of constraints in the soil-plant-atmosphere pathway, our results confirm the relevance of this approach to synthesize the overall behavior of trees under drought.


Subject(s)
Droughts , Hevea/physiology , Models, Biological , Plant Transpiration , Water/physiology , Air/analysis , Circadian Rhythm , Kinetics , Plant Leaves/physiology , Rain , Seasons , Soil/analysis , Water/analysis
6.
New Phytol ; 127(2): 287-295, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33874511

ABSTRACT

Clusia uvitana Pittíer (Clusiacea) is a tropical hemiepiphyte that has been shown to display a high plasticity in the expression of CAM in response to the environment. When water is available CO2 is taken up mostly during the- day. This study of the water relations and hydraulic architecture has revealed that leaf water potentials, £ ranged from 0-7 to -0.9 MPa and changed very little with time or water availability. The absolute hydraulic conductivity of stem segments (K,) and the specific conductivity (K1 ) were comparable to many other temperate and tropical species, but the leaf specificity conductivity (K1 ) was 1/3 to 1/30 that of many other species. So stems supported high leaf areas per unit of hydraulic conductivity. C uvitana was very vulnerable to cavitation, reaching 50 % loss of hydraulic conductivity at stem £=1.3 MPa. The species survives in spite of low K1 and high xylem vulnerability, because the CAM physiology insures low transpiration rates and high ability to evade dehydration.

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