Literature DB >> 27807136

The correlations and sequence of plant stomatal, hydraulic, and wilting responses to drought.

Megan K Bartlett1, Tamir Klein2, Steven Jansen3, Brendan Choat4, Lawren Sack5.   

Abstract

Climate change is expected to exacerbate drought for many plants, making drought tolerance a key driver of species and ecosystem responses. Plant drought tolerance is determined by multiple traits, but the relationships among traits, either within individual plants or across species, have not been evaluated for general patterns across plant diversity. We synthesized the published data for stomatal closure, wilting, declines in hydraulic conductivity in the leaves, stems, and roots, and plant mortality for 262 woody angiosperm and 48 gymnosperm species. We evaluated the correlations among the drought tolerance traits across species, and the general sequence of water potential thresholds for these traits within individual plants. The trait correlations across species provide a framework for predicting plant responses to a wide range of water stress from one or two sampled traits, increasing the ability to rapidly characterize drought tolerance across diverse species. Analyzing these correlations also identified correlations among the leaf and stem hydraulic traits and the wilting point, or turgor loss point, beyond those expected from shared ancestry or independent associations with water stress alone. Further, on average, the angiosperm species generally exhibited a sequence of drought tolerance traits that is expected to limit severe tissue damage during drought, such as wilting and substantial stem embolism. This synthesis of the relationships among the drought tolerance traits provides crucial, empirically supported insight into representing variation in multiple traits in models of plant and ecosystem responses to drought.

Entities:  

Keywords:  drought tolerance; leaf hydraulics; stem hydraulics; stomatal closure; turgor loss point

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27807136      PMCID: PMC5135344          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1604088113

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


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9.  Extrapolating Physiological Response to Drought through Step-by-Step Analysis of Water Potential.

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