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Gas exchange and resource‐use efficiency of Leymus cinereus (Poaceae): diurnal and seasonal responses to naturally declining soil moisture
Author(s) -
Anderson Jay E.,
Nowak Robert S.,
Rasmuson Kaylie E.,
Toft Nancee L.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1995.tb15680.x
Subject(s) - stomatal conductance , water use efficiency , photosynthesis , agronomy , biology , tussock , carbon dioxide , water content , steppe , growing season , photosynthetic capacity , botany , environmental science , ecology , geotechnical engineering , engineering
We examined factors that limit diurnal and seasonal photosynthesis in Leymus cinereus , a robust tussock grass from shrub‐steppes of western North America. Data from plants in a natural stand and in experimental field plots indicate that this bunchgrass has 1) a high photosynthetic capacity, 2) high leaf nitrogen content and high nitrogen‐use efficiency, 3) a steep leaf‐to‐air diffusion gradient for carbon dioxide, which enhances intrinsic water‐use efficiency, and 4) photosynthetic tissues that tolerate severe water stress and recover quickly from moderate water stress. Midday depressions of CO 2 assimilation ( A ) and stomatal conductance were slight in plants with plentiful water, but marked in plants subject to moderate water stress. Midday stomatal closure in moderately stressed plants reduced intercellular carbon dioxide concentration ( c i ) by ≈40 μ l liter ‐1 . The maximum rate of A achieved during the day for severely stressed plants (predawn water potential = ‐4 MPa) was one‐third and daily carbon gain per unit leaf area was about one‐fourth that of well‐watered plants. For plants in the natural stand, CO 2 ‐saturated photosynthesis declined almost linearly with decreasing soil water availability over the growing season, whereas there was little effect on A at CO 2 ambient levels or on carboxylation efficiency until predawn water potentials reached ‐1.8 MPa. Nitrogen‐use efficiency declined with diminishing soil moisture, but there was no seasonal change in stomatal limitation or instantaneous water‐use efficiency as estimated from A vs. c i curves at optimal leaf temperature and moderate atmospheric evaporative demand. Thus, reduced stomatal conductance in response to increased evaporative demand may increase stomatal limitation diumally, but over the growing season, stomatal limitation estimated from A vs. c i curves is relatively constant because maximum stomatal conductance is closely tuned to the CO 2 assimilatory capacity of the mesophyll.