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Increased contribution of wheat nocturnal transpiration to daily water use under drought
Author(s) -
Claverie Elodie,
Meunier Félicien,
Javaux Mathieu,
Sadok Walid
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/ppl.12623
Subject(s) - transpiration , vapour pressure deficit , nocturnal , arid , drought tolerance , soil water , agronomy , water use , biology , horticulture , botany , photosynthesis , ecology
Increasing evidence suggests that in crops, nocturnal water use could represent 30% of daytime water consumption, particularly in semi‐arid and arid areas. This raises the questions of whether nocturnal transpiration rates (TR N ) are (1) less influenced by drought than daytime TR (TR D ), (2) increased by higher nocturnal vapor pressure deficit (VPD N ), which prevails in such environments and (3) involved in crop drought tolerance. In this investigation, we addressed those questions by subjecting two wheat genotypes differing in drought tolerance to progressive soil drying under two long‐term VPD N regimes imposed under naturally fluctuating conditions. A first goal was to characterize the response curves of whole‐plant TR N and TR N /TR D ratios to progressive soil drying. A second goal was to examine the effect of VPD N increase on TR N response to soil drying and on 13 other developmental traits. The study revealed that under drought, TR N was not responsive to progressive soil drying and – intriguingly – that TR N seemingly increased with drought under high VPD N consistently for the drought‐sensitive genotype. Because TR D was concomitantly decreasing with progressive drought, this resulted in TR N representing up to 70% of TR D at the end of the drydown. In addition, under drought, VPD N increase was found not to influence traits such as leaf area or stomata density. Overall, those findings indicate that TR N contribution to daily water use under drought might be much higher than previously thought, that it is controlled by specific mechanisms and that decreasing TR N under drought might be a valuable trait for improving drought tolerance.