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  4. Stability of tropical forest tree carbon-water relations in a rainfall exclusion treatment through shifts in effective water uptake depth
 
research article

Stability of tropical forest tree carbon-water relations in a rainfall exclusion treatment through shifts in effective water uptake depth

Pivovaroff, Alexandria L.
•
McDowell, Nate G.
•
Rodrigues, Tayana Barrozo
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September 21, 2021
Global Change Biology

Increasing severity and frequency of drought is predicted for large portions of the terrestrial biosphere, with major impacts already documented in wet tropical forests. Using a 4-year rainfall exclusion experiment in the Daintree Rainforest in northeast Australia, we examined canopy tree responses to reduced precipitation and soil water availability by quantifying seasonal changes in plant hydraulic and carbon traits for 11 tree species between control and drought treatments. Even with reduced soil volumetric water content in the upper 1 m of soil in the drought treatment, we found no significant difference between treatments for predawn and midday leaf water potential, photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, foliar stable carbon isotope composition, leaf mass per area, turgor loss point, xylem vessel anatomy, or leaf and stem nonstructural carbohydrates. While empirical measurements of aboveground traits revealed homeostatic maintenance of plant water status and traits in response to reduced soil moisture, modeled belowground dynamics revealed that trees in the drought treatment shifted the depth from which water was acquired to deeper soil layers. These findings reveal that belowground acclimation of tree water uptake depth may buffer tropical rainforests from more severe droughts that may arise in future with climate change.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/gcb.15869
Web of Science ID

WOS:000697341300001

Author(s)
Pivovaroff, Alexandria L.
McDowell, Nate G.
Rodrigues, Tayana Barrozo
Brodribb, Tim
Cernusak, Lucas A.
Choat, Brendan
Grossiord, Charlotte  
Ishida, Yoko
Jardine, Kolby J.
Laurance, Susan
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Date Issued

2021-09-21

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Global Change Biology
Volume

27

Issue

24

Start page

6454

End page

6466

Subjects

Biodiversity Conservation

•

Ecology

•

Environmental Sciences

•

Biodiversity & Conservation

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

drought

•

gas exchange

•

nonstructural carbohydrates

•

plant hydraulics

•

process model

•

rainfall exclusion

•

rooting depth

•

turgor loss point

•

water potentials

•

wet tropical forest

•

experimental drought

•

stomatal responses

•

soil-water

•

mortality

•

strategies

•

environment

•

dynamics

•

gradient

•

decline

•

leaves

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PERL  
Available on Infoscience
October 9, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/182084
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