Literature DB >> 30513545

Beyond isohydricity: The role of environmental variability in determining plant drought responses.

Xue Feng1, David D Ackerly2, Todd E Dawson2,3, Stefano Manzoni4,5, Blair McLaughlin6, Robert P Skelton2, Giulia Vico7, Andrew P Weitz2, Sally E Thompson8.   

Abstract

Despite the appeal of the iso/anisohydric framework for classifying plant drought responses, recent studies have shown that such classifications can be strongly affected by a plant's environment. Here, we present measured in situ drought responses to demonstrate that apparent isohydricity can be conflated with environmental conditions that vary over space and time. In particular, we (a) use data from an oak species (Quercus douglasii) during the 2012-2015 extreme drought in California to demonstrate how temporal and spatial variability in the environment can influence plant water potential dynamics, masking the role of traits; (b) explain how these environmental variations might arise from climatic, topographic, and edaphic variability; (c) illustrate, through a "common garden" thought experiment, how existing trait-based or response-based isohydricity metrics can be confounded by these environmental variations, leading to Type-1 (false positive) and Type-2 (false negative) errors; and (d) advocate for the use of model-based approaches for formulating alternate classification schemes. Building on recent insights from greenhouse and vineyard studies, we offer additional evidence across multiple field sites to demonstrate the importance of spatial and temporal drivers of plants' apparent isohydricity. This evidence challenges the use of isohydricity indices, per se, to characterize plant water relations at the global scale.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  classification; intrinsic traits; plant water potentials

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30513545     DOI: 10.1111/pce.13486

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Cell Environ        ISSN: 0140-7791            Impact factor:   7.228


  5 in total

1.  Photoprotection Is Achieved by Photorespiration and Modification of the Leaf Incident Light, and Their Extent Is Modulated by the Stomatal Sensitivity to Water Deficit in Grapevines.

Authors:  Luis Villalobos-González; Nicolás Alarcón; Roberto Bastías; Cristobal Pérez; René Sanz; Álvaro Peña-Neira; Claudio Pastenes
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-12

2.  Controversies in Midday Water Potential Regulation and Stomatal Behavior Might Result From the Environment, Genotype, and/or Rootstock: Evidence From Carménère and Syrah Grapevine Varieties.

Authors:  Luis Villalobos-González; Mariana Muñoz-Araya; Nicolas Franck; Claudio Pastenes
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-12-02       Impact factor: 5.753

3.  Confronting the water potential information gap.

Authors:  Kimberly A Novick; Darren L Ficklin; Dennis Baldocchi; Kenneth J Davis; Teamrat A Ghezzehei; Alexandra G Konings; Natasha MacBean; Nina Raoult; Russell L Scott; Yuning Shi; Benjamin N Sulman; Jeffrey D Wood
Journal:  Nat Geosci       Date:  2022-03-11       Impact factor: 21.531

Review 4.  Bridge to the future: Important lessons from 20 years of ecosystem observations made by the OzFlux network.

Authors:  Jason Beringer; Caitlin E Moore; Jamie Cleverly; David I Campbell; Helen Cleugh; Martin G De Kauwe; Miko U F Kirschbaum; Anne Griebel; Sam Grover; Alfredo Huete; Lindsay B Hutley; Johannes Laubach; Tom Van Niel; Stefan K Arndt; Alison C Bennett; Lucas A Cernusak; Derek Eamus; Cacilia M Ewenz; Jordan P Goodrich; Mingkai Jiang; Nina Hinko-Najera; Peter Isaac; Sanaa Hobeichi; Jürgen Knauer; Georgia R Koerber; Michael Liddell; Xuanlong Ma; Craig Macfarlane; Ian D McHugh; Belinda E Medlyn; Wayne S Meyer; Alexander J Norton; Jyoteshna Owens; Andy Pitman; Elise Pendall; Suzanne M Prober; Ram L Ray; Natalia Restrepo-Coupe; Sami W Rifai; David Rowlings; Louis Schipper; Richard P Silberstein; Lina Teckentrup; Sally E Thompson; Anna M Ukkola; Aaron Wall; Ying-Ping Wang; Tim J Wardlaw; William Woodgate
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-03-22       Impact factor: 13.211

5.  A Dynamic Model for Strategies and Dynamics of Plant Water-Potential Regulation Under Drought Conditions.

Authors:  Phillip Papastefanou; Christian S Zang; Thomas A M Pugh; Daijun Liu; Thorsten E E Grams; Thomas Hickler; Anja Rammig
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 5.753

  5 in total

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