| Literature DB >> 27069619 |
Andrea J Maguire1, Richard K Kobe2.
Abstract
Plants that store nonstructural carbohydrates (NSC) may rely on carbon reserves to survive carbon-limiting stress, assuming that reserves can be mobilized. We asked whether carbon reserves decrease in resource stressed seedlings, and if NSC allocation is related to species' relative stress tolerances. We tested the effects of stress (shade, drought, and defoliation) on NSC in seedlings of five temperate tree species (Acer rubrum Marsh., Betula papyrifera Marsh., Fraxinus americana L ., Quercus rubra L., and Quercus velutina Lam.). In a greenhouse experiment, seedlings were subjected to combinations of shade, drought, and defoliation. We harvested seedlings over 32-97 days and measured biomass and NSC concentrations in stems and roots to estimate depletion rates. For all species and treatments, except for defoliation, seedling growth and NSC accumulation ceased. Shade and drought combined caused total NSC decreases in all species. For shade or drought alone, only some species experienced decreases. Starch followed similar patterns as total NSC, but soluble sugars increased under drought for drought-tolerant species. These results provide evidence that species deplete stored carbon in response to carbon limiting stress and that species differences in NSC response may be important for understanding carbon depletion as a buffer against shade- and drought-induced mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon reserves; carbon starvation; nonstructural carbohydrates; soluble sugars; starch; stress
Year: 2015 PMID: 27069619 PMCID: PMC4813112 DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Evol ISSN: 2045-7758 Impact factor: 2.912
Study species and their relative shade and drought tolerance based on Burns and Honkala (1990)
| Species | Common name | Shade tolerance | Drought tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Red maple | Tolerant | Intermediate |
|
| Paper birch | Very intolerant | Very intolerant |
|
| White ash | Intermediate | Intermediate |
|
| Northern red oak | Intermediate | Tolerant |
|
| Black oak | Intolerant | Very tolerant |
Figure 1Seedlings growing in the greenhouse.
Means and standard deviations for mass and nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) components of seedlings sampled before treatment. a) NSC concentration, b) Starch concentration, c) Soluble sugar concentration d) Plant mass and age. Species abbreviations in Table 1. * Values in gray for FA were estimated from linear models because total plant mass was not measured for the first harvest and we could not calculate them directly
| Total | Stem | Root | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| (a) NSC (% dry mass) | ||||||
| AR | 15.10 | 6.14 | 10.61 | 4.79 | 18.40 | 7.42 |
| BP | 7.12 | 1.66 | 5.93 | 2.02 | 9.16 | 2.25 |
| FA |
|
| 14.31 | 4.39 | 19.29 | 5.02 |
| QR | 14.94 | 4.21 | 8.62 | 2.11 | 16.82 | 5.03 |
| QV | 22.97 | 3.49 | 9.07 | 1.66 | 26.23 | 3.86 |
| (b) Starch (% dry mass) | ||||||
| AR | 10.68 | 5.46 | 6.74 | 4.23 | 13.43 | 6.72 |
| BP | 1.58 | 0.71 | 0.52 | 0.65 | 3.45 | 1.73 |
| FA |
|
| 8.54 | 3.87 | 11.38 | 3.81 |
| QR | 11.05 | 3.81 | 4.45 | 2.27 | 13.06 | 4.58 |
| QV | 20.10 | 4.00 | 4.89 | 1.89 | 23.68 | 4.45 |
| (c) Soluble Sugar (% dry mass) | ||||||
| AR | 4.42 | 1.01 | 3.86 | 1.40 | 4.98 | 1.27 |
| BP | 5.54 | 1.35 | 5.40 | 1.80 | 5.72 | 1.21 |
| FA |
|
| 5.98 | 1.47 | 8.68 | 1.72 |
| QR | 3.89 | 0.87 | 4.17 | 1.01 | 2.55 | 1.05 |
| QV | 2.87 | 0.86 | 4.18 | 1.06 | 2.55 | 0.98 |
AR, Acer rubrum Marsh; BP, Betula papyrifera Marsh.; FA, Fraxinus americana L.; QR, Quercus rubra L.; QV, Quercus velutina Lam)
Figure 2Relationship between the ln of stem and root nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) concentrations for five temperate tree species.
Figure 3Total nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) concentrations in seedlings over time under five treatments: C = control (50% light, well‐watered), D = drought (50% light and no water), S = shade (<3% light, well‐watered), SD = shade + drought (<3% light, no water). Each point represents one seedling. Lines are best‐fit linear models for each treatment with a common intercept, and NSC concentrations are natural log transformed. Models include seedlings from a nonsignificant defoliation treatment that is pooled with other treatments.
Figure 4Soluble sugar concentrations in seedlings over time under five treatments: C = control (50% light, well‐watered), D = drought (50% light and no water), S = shade (<3% light, well‐watered), SD = shade + drought (<3% light, no water). Each point represents one seedling. Lines are best‐fit linear models for each treatment with a common intercept, and NSC concentrations are ln transformed. Models include seedlings from a nonsignificant defoliation treatment that is pooled with other treatments.