Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4004
Title: Leaf thermotolerance in dry tropical forest tree species: relationships with leaf traits and effects of drought
Authors: SASTRY, ANIRUDDH
GUHA, ANIRBAN
BARUA, DEEPAK
Dept. of Biology
Keywords: Climate change
Drought
Leaf functional traits
Photosynthesis
PSII chlorophyll fluorescence
Thermotolerance
Tropical forests
2018
Issue Date: Feb-2018
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Citation: AoB PLANTS, 10(1), plx070.
Abstract: Understanding how tropical trees will respond to extreme temperatures and drought is essential to predict how future increases in the severity, frequency and duration of extreme climatic events will affect tropical systems. In this study, we investigated leaf thermotolerance by quantifying the temperatures that resulted in a 50 % decrease in photosystem II function (T50) in experimentally grown saplings of 12 tree species from a seasonally dry tropical forest. We examined the relationship of thermotolerance with leaf functional traits and photosynthetic rates. Additionally, we tested how water limitation altered thermotolerance within species, and examined the relationship between thermotolerance and drought tolerance among species. Thermotolerance ranged from 44.5 to 48.1 °C in the least and most thermotolerant species, respectively. The observed variation in thermotolerance indicates that the upper limits of leaf function are critically close to maximum temperatures in this region, and that these species will be vulnerable to, and differentially affected by, future warming. Drought increased temperature tolerance, and species that were more drought tolerant were also more thermotolerant. Importantly, thermotolerance was positively related to the key leaf functional trait—leaf mass per area (LMA), and congruent with this, negatively related to photosynthetic rates. These results indicate that more productive species with lower LMA and higher photosynthetic rates may be more vulnerable to heat and drought stress, and more likely to be negatively affected by future increases in extreme climatic events.
URI: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4004
https://doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plx070
ISSN: 2041-2851
2041-2851
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