Functional leaf and size traits determine the photosynthetic response of 10 dryland species to warming
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Publication date
2016
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Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
Enrique Valencia, José L. Quero, Fernando T. Maestre, Functional leaf and size traits determine the photosynthetic response of 10 dryland species to warming, Journal of Plant Ecology, Volume 9, Issue 6, 1 December 2016, Pages 773–783, https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtv081
Abstract
Aims
Relatively few studies so far have assessed how ongoing global warming will affect the photosynthetic performance of dryland plant species. We evaluated the effects of warming on the photosynthetic rates of 10 species with contrasting functional attributes, and whether their functional traits modulated photosynthetic responses to warming.
Methods
A common garden experiment was conducted over 2 years with distinct environmental conditions (drier vs. wetter year). The experiment was designed as a randomized block design with two treatments: warming (control vs. ~2.9°C temperature increase) and species (Agropyron cristatum, Festuca ovina, Lygeum spartum, Medicago sativa, Plantago lanceolata, Psoralea bituminosa, Sanguisorba minor, Hedysarum coronarium, Dorycnium pentaphyllum and Phlomis herba-venti). We linked functional traits measurements with temporal variations in photosynthetic responses to warming.
Important Findings
In the drier year, warming increased photosynthetic rates at the beginning of the growing season, suggesting a modification in the growing period (earlier spring). In the wetter year, functional traits modulated photosynthetic responses to warming. Larger species with shorter leaves (e.g. M. sativa) had higher photosynthetic rates under warming compared to smaller species with larger leaves (e.g. F. ovina). Our results highlight the importance of (i) studying photosynthetic responses along different years and (ii) considering functional traits when evaluating photosynthetic responses to climate change, particularly in stressful environments such as drylands.
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FUNDING
This research was supported by the European Research Council under the European Community’s Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC Grant agreement 242658 (BIOCOM). F.T.M. acknowledges support from the Salvador de Madariaga program of the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (PRX14/00225) during the writing of the manuscript.