Literature DB >> 33570772

Linking plant hydraulics and the fast-slow continuum to understand resilience to drought in tropical ecosystems.

Rafael S Oliveira1, Cleiton B Eller1, Fernanda de V Barros1,2, Marina Hirota1,3, Mauro Brum1,4, Paulo Bittencourt1,2.   

Abstract

Tropical ecosystems have the highest levels of biodiversity, cycle more water and absorb more carbon than any other terrestrial ecosystem on Earth. Consequently, these ecosystems are extremely important components of Earth's climatic system and biogeochemical cycles. Plant hydraulics is an essential discipline to understand and predict the dynamics of tropical vegetation in scenarios of changing water availability. Using published plant hydraulic data we show that the trade-off between drought avoidance (expressed as deep-rooting, deciduousness and capacitance) and hydraulic safety (P50 - the water potential when plants lose 50% of their maximum hydraulic conductivity) is a major axis of physiological variation across tropical ecosystems. We also propose a novel and independent axis of hydraulic trait variation linking vulnerability to hydraulic failure (expressed as the hydraulic safety margin (HSM)) and growth, where inherent fast-growing plants have lower HSM compared to slow-growing plants. We surmise that soil nutrients are fundamental drivers of tropical community assembly determining the distribution and abundance of the slow-safe/fast-risky strategies. We conclude showing that including either the growth-HSM or the resistance-avoidance trade-off in models can make simulated tropical rainforest communities substantially more vulnerable to drought than similar communities without the trade-off. These results suggest that vegetation models need to represent hydraulic trade-off axes to accurately project the functioning and distribution of tropical ecosystems.
© 2021 The Authors New Phytologist © 2021 New Phytologist Foundation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Amazon tropical forest; drought; embolism resistance; hydraulic safety margin; plant hydraulic diversity; rainforest; tropical dry forest; tropical savannahs

Year:  2021        PMID: 33570772     DOI: 10.1111/nph.17266

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  9 in total

1.  Climatic and biotic factors influencing regional declines and recovery of tropical forest biomass from the 2015/16 El Niño.

Authors:  Hui Yang; Philippe Ciais; Jean-Pierre Wigneron; Jérôme Chave; Oliver Cartus; Xiuzhi Chen; Lei Fan; Julia K Green; Yuanyuan Huang; Emilie Joetzjer; Heather Kay; David Makowski; Fabienne Maignan; Maurizio Santoro; Shengli Tao; Liyang Liu; Yitong Yao
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 12.779

2.  Recurrent droughts increase risk of cascading tipping events by outpacing adaptive capacities in the Amazon rainforest.

Authors:  Nico Wunderling; Arie Staal; Boris Sakschewski; Marina Hirota; Obbe A Tuinenburg; Jonathan F Donges; Henrique M J Barbosa; Ricarda Winkelmann
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-08-02       Impact factor: 12.779

3.  Functional susceptibility of tropical forests to climate change.

Authors:  Jesús Aguirre-Gutiérrez; Erika Berenguer; Imma Oliveras Menor; David Bauman; Jose Javier Corral-Rivas; Maria Guadalupe Nava-Miranda; Sabine Both; Josué Edzang Ndong; Fidèle Evouna Ondo; Natacha N'ssi Bengone; Vianet Mihinhou; James W Dalling; Katherine Heineman; Axa Figueiredo; Roy González-M; Natalia Norden; Ana Belén Hurtado-M; Diego González; Beatriz Salgado-Negret; Simone Matias Reis; Marina Maria Moraes de Seixas; William Farfan-Rios; Alexander Shenkin; Terhi Riutta; Cécile A J Girardin; Sam Moore; Kate Abernethy; Gregory P Asner; Lisa Patrick Bentley; David F R P Burslem; Lucas A Cernusak; Brian J Enquist; Robert M Ewers; Joice Ferreira; Kathryn J Jeffery; Carlos A Joly; Ben Hur Marimon-Junior; Roberta E Martin; Paulo S Morandi; Oliver L Phillips; Amy C Bennett; Simon L Lewis; Carlos A Quesada; Beatriz Schwantes Marimon; W Daniel Kissling; Miles Silman; Yit Arn Teh; Lee J T White; Norma Salinas; David A Coomes; Jos Barlow; Stephen Adu-Bredu; Yadvinder Malhi
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 19.100

Review 4.  Regional and local determinants of drought resilience in tropical forests.

Authors:  Renan Köpp Hollunder; Mário Luís Garbin; Fabio Rubio Scarano; Pierre Mariotte
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 3.167

5.  Contrasting Hydraulic Efficiency and Photosynthesis Strategy in Differential Successional Stages of a Subtropical Forest in a Karst Region.

Authors:  Guilin Wu; Dexiang Chen; Zhang Zhou
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2021-11-27

6.  Species richness stabilizes productivity via asynchrony and drought-tolerance diversity in a large-scale tree biodiversity experiment.

Authors:  Florian Schnabel; Xiaojuan Liu; Matthias Kunz; Kathryn E Barry; Franca J Bongers; Helge Bruelheide; Andreas Fichtner; Werner Härdtle; Shan Li; Claas-Thido Pfaff; Bernhard Schmid; Julia A Schwarz; Zhiyao Tang; Bo Yang; Jürgen Bauhus; Goddert von Oheimb; Keping Ma; Christian Wirth
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-12-17       Impact factor: 14.136

7.  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

8.  Divergence of hydraulic traits among tropical forest trees across topographic and vertical environment gradients in Borneo.

Authors:  Paulo Roberto de Lima Bittencourt; David C Bartholomew; Lindsay F Banin; Mohamed Aminur Faiz Bin Suis; Reuben Nilus; David F R P Burslem; Lucy Rowland
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2022-06-26       Impact factor: 10.323

Review 9.  Strategies of tree species to adapt to drought from leaf stomatal regulation and stem embolism resistance to root properties.

Authors:  Zhicheng Chen; Shan Li; Xianchong Wan; Shirong Liu
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-09-27       Impact factor: 6.627

  9 in total

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