Literature DB >> 29768696

The "isohydric trap": A proposed feedback between water shortage, stomatal regulation, and nutrient acquisition drives differential growth and survival of European pines under climatic dryness.

Diego Salazar-Tortosa1, Jorge Castro1, Pedro Villar-Salvador2, Benjamín Viñegla3, Luis Matías3, Anders Michelsen4, Rafael Rubio de Casas1, José I Querejeta5.   

Abstract

Climatic dryness imposes limitations on vascular plant growth by reducing stomatal conductance, thereby decreasing CO2 uptake and transpiration. Given that transpiration-driven water flow is required for nutrient uptake, climatic stress-induced nutrient deficit could be a key mechanism for decreased plant performance under prolonged drought. We propose the existence of an "isohydric trap," a dryness-induced detrimental feedback leading to nutrient deficit and stoichiometry imbalance in strict isohydric species. We tested this framework in a common garden experiment with 840 individuals of four ecologically contrasting European pines (Pinus halepensis, P. nigra, P. sylvestris, and P. uncinata) at a site with high temperature and low soil water availability. We measured growth, survival, photochemical efficiency, stem water potentials, leaf isotopic composition (δ13 C, δ18 O), and nutrient concentrations (C, N, P, K, Zn, Cu). After 2 years, the Mediterranean species Pinus halepensis showed lower δ18 O and higher δ13 C values than the other species, indicating higher time-integrated transpiration and water-use efficiency (WUE), along with lower predawn and midday water potentials, higher photochemical efficiency, higher leaf P, and K concentrations, more balanced N:P and N:K ratios, and much greater dry-biomass (up to 63-fold) and survival (100%). Conversely, the more mesic mountain pine species showed higher leaf δ18 O and lower δ13 C, indicating lower transpiration and WUE, higher water potentials, severe P and K deficiencies and N:P and N:K imbalances, and poorer photochemical efficiency, growth, and survival. These results support our hypothesis that vascular plant species with tight stomatal regulation of transpiration can become trapped in a feedback cycle of nutrient deficit and imbalance that exacerbates the detrimental impacts of climatic dryness on performance. This overlooked feedback mechanism may hamper the ability of isohydric species to respond to ongoing global change, by aggravating the interactive impacts of stoichiometric imbalance and water stress caused by anthropogenic N deposition and hotter droughts, respectively.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  climatic change; hotter drought; nutrients; stable isotopes; stoichiometry; stomatal behaviour; water use efficiency

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29768696     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14311

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  9 in total

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6.  Mineral Nutrition of Naturally Growing Scots Pine and Norway Spruce under Limited Water Supply.

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7.  Higher leaf nitrogen content is linked to tighter stomatal regulation of transpiration and more efficient water use across dryland trees.

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9.  The role of nutritional impairment in carbon-water balance of silver fir drought-induced dieback.

Authors:  Ester González de Andrés; Antonio Gazol; José Ignacio Querejeta; José M Igual; Michele Colangelo; Raúl Sánchez-Salguero; Juan Carlos Linares; J Julio Camarero
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  9 in total

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