| Literature DB >> 28547290 |
N McDowell1, H Barnard2,3, B Bond4, T Hinckley5, R Hubbard2,3, H Ishii5, B Köstner6, F Magnani7, J Marshall8, F Meinzer9, N Phillips4, M Ryan2,3, D Whitehead10.
Abstract
The leaf area to sapwood area ratio (A l:A s) of trees has been hypothesized to decrease as trees become older and taller. Theory suggests that A l:A s must decrease to maintain leaf-specific hydraulic sufficiency as path length, gravity, and tortuosity constrain whole-plant hydraulic conductance. We tested the hypothesis that A l:A s declines with tree height. Whole-tree A l:A s was measured on 15 individuals of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii) ranging in height from 13 to 62 m (aged 20-450 years). A l:A s declined substantially as height increased (P=0.02). Our test of the hypothesis that A l:A s declines with tree height was extended using a combination of original and published data on nine species across a range of maximum heights and climates. Meta-analysis of 13 whole-tree studies revealed a consistent and significant reduction in A l:A s with increasing height (P<0.05). However, two species (Picea abies and Abies balsamea) exhibited an increase in A l:A s with height, although the reason for this is not clear. The slope of the relationship between A l:A s and tree height (ΔA l:A s/Δh) was unrelated to mean annual precipitation. Maximum potential height was positively correlated with ΔA l:A s/Δh. The decrease in A l:A s with increasing tree size that we observed in the majority of species may be a homeostatic mechanism that partially compensates for decreased hydraulic conductance as trees grow in height.Entities:
Keywords: Hydraulic architecture; Hydraulic limitation; Leaf area: sapwood area; Old trees
Year: 2002 PMID: 28547290 DOI: 10.1007/s00442-002-0904-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225