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  4. Severe declines in hydraulic capacity and associated carbon starvation drive mortality in seawater exposed Sitka-spruce (Picea sitchensis) trees
 
research article

Severe declines in hydraulic capacity and associated carbon starvation drive mortality in seawater exposed Sitka-spruce (Picea sitchensis) trees

Wang, Wenzhi
•
Zhang, Peipei
•
Zhang, Hongxia
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March 1, 2022
Environmental Research Communications

Sea-level rise is causing widespread tree mortality of coastal forests, with large consequences on the Earth system as a result of these forests' importance in carbon and nutrient export. The mechanisms of mortality under these conditions are, however, poorly tested. We used wood anatomy traits, wood delta C-13, and tree radial growth to retrospectively assess the physiological process of seawater effects on whole tree xylem hydraulic capacity, gas exchange, and radial growth. During the latter stages of mortality (2018-2019), we directly measured metrics of water use and carbon metabolism across trees having crowns ranging from fully foliated to completely defoliated to investigate mortality processes at the sub-annual scale. Upon seawater exposure, soil salinity increased and allocation to hydraulic function declined, resulting in a dramatic reduction in water supply to the crown, increased crown-level water stress, and subsequent crown foliage loss. Simultaneously, leaf-level photosynthetic capacity declined steeply with increasing salinity. The combined loss of crown foliage area and photosynthetic rates per unit leaf area promoted carbon starvation, while no evidence of hydraulic failure was observed. These results elucidate mechanisms of coastal forest death under seawater exposure, enabling more accurate modeling in the future.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/2515-7620/ac5f7d
Web of Science ID

WOS:000776458200001

Author(s)
Wang, Wenzhi
Zhang, Peipei
Zhang, Hongxia
Grossiord, Charlotte  
Pennington, Stephanie C.
Norwood, Matthew J.
Li, Weibin
Pivovaroff, Alexandria L.
Fernandez-de-Una, Laura
Leff, Riley
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Date Issued

2022-03-01

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd

Published in
Environmental Research Communications
Volume

4

Issue

3

Article Number

035005

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

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Environmental Sciences & Ecology

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coastal forest

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tree mortality

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tree rings

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drought-induced tree

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pinyon-juniper woodland

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physiological-mechanisms

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vulnerability

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salinity

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growth

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embolism

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xylem

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transpiration

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precipitation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PERL  
Available on Infoscience
April 25, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/187397
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