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Cavitation resistance and seasonal hydraulics differ among three arid Californian plant communities
Author(s) -
JACOBSEN ANNA L.,
PRATT R. BRANDON,
DAVIS STEPHEN D.,
EWERS FRANK W.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2007.01729.x
Subject(s) - chaparral , evergreen , dry season , shrub , deciduous , ecology , arid , resistance (ecology) , biology , wet season , growing season , agronomy
Vulnerability to water stress‐induced cavitation was measured on 27 woody shrub species from three arid plant communities including chaparral, coastal sage and Mojave Desert scrub. Dry season native embolism and pre‐dawn water potential, and both wet and dry season xylem specific hydraulic conductivity ( K s ) were measured. Cavitation resistance, estimated as water potential at 50% loss in conductivity ( Ψ 50 ), was measured on all species during the wet season and on a subset of species during the dry season. Cavitation resistance varied with sampling season, with 8 of 13 sampled species displaying significant seasonal shifts. Native embolism and water potential were useful in identification of species displaying seasonal shifts. The K s was not different among sites or seasons. The Ψ 50 varied among species and communities. Within communities, interspecific variation may be partially explained by differences in rooting depth or leaf habit (evergreen, semi‐deciduous, deciduous). Communities diverged in their Ψ 50 with chaparral species displaying the greatest cavitation resistance regardless of sampling season. The greater cavitation resistance of chaparral species is surprising, considering the greater aridity of the Mojave Desert site. Adaptation to arid environments is due to many plant traits, and aridity does not necessarily lead to convergence in cavitation resistance.

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