Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/9348
Title: Leaf Temperatures in an Indian Tropical Forest Exceed Physiological Limits but Durations of Exposures Are Currently Not Sufficient to Cause Lasting Damage
Authors: JAVAD, AKHIL
PREMUGH, VIKHYATH
Tiwari, Rakesh
BANDARU, PEDDIRAJU
SUNNY, RON
Hegde, Balachandra
Clerici, Santiago
Galbraith, David
Gloor, Manuel
BARUA, DEEPAK
Dept. of Biology
Keywords: Agroforestry
Climate change
Leaf temperature
Photo synthesis
Thermotolerance
Tropical forests
2025-FEB-WEEK2
TOC-FEB-2025
2025
Issue Date: Feb-2025
Publisher: Wiley
Citation: Global Change Biology, 32(02).
Abstract: Increasing temperatures in the tropics will reduce performance of trees and agroforestry species and may lead to lasting damage and leaf death. One criterion to determine future forest resilience is to evaluate damage caused by temperature on Photosystem-II (PSII), a particularly sensitive component of photosynthesis. The temperature at which 50% of PSII function is lost (T50) is a widely used measure of irreversible damage to leaves. To assess vulnerability to high temperatures, studies have measured T50 or leaf temperatures, but rarely both. Further, because extant leaf temperature records are short, duration of exposure above thresholds like T50 has not been considered. Finally, these studies do not directly assess the effect of threshold exceedance on leaves. To understand how often, and how long, leaf temperatures exceed critical thresholds, we measured leaf temperatures of forest and agroforestry species in a tropical forest in the Western Ghats of India where air temperatures are high. We quantified species-specific physiological thresholds and assessed leaf damage after high-temperature exposure. We found that leaf temperatures already exceed T50. However, continuous exposure durations above critical thresholds are very skewed with most events lasting for much less than 30 min. As T50 was measured after a 30-min exposure, our results suggest that threshold exceedances and exposure durations for lasting damage are currently not reached and will rarely be reached if maximum air temperatures increase by 4°C. Consistent with this, we found only minor indications of heat damage in the forest species. However, there were indications of heat-induced reduction in PSII function and damage in the agroforestry leaves which have lower T50. Our findings suggest that, for forest species, while high-temperature thresholds may be surpassed, durations of exposure above thresholds remain short, and therefore, are unlikely to lead to irreversible damage and leaf death, even under 4°C warming.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70069
http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/9348
ISSN: 1365-2486
1354-1013
Appears in Collections:JOURNAL ARTICLES

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