z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Gas exchange characteristics and their influencing factors for halophytic plant communities on west coast of Bohai Sea
Author(s) -
Fude Liu,
Xue Mo,
Sen Zhang,
Feijie Chen,
Desheng Li
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0229047
Subject(s) - halophyte , phragmites , transpiration , photosynthesis , stomatal conductance , biology , botany , dry weight , tamarix , horticulture , salinity , wetland , ecology
Water–salt stress and nutrient limitation may affect leaf economic spectrum of halophytes and confuse our understanding on plant physiological principles in a changing world. In this study, three halophytic plant communities of Phragmites australis , Suaeda salsa , and Tamarix chinensis , were selected in two sites (sites 1 and 2) on the west coast of Bohai Sea. The net photosynthetic rate ( P n ), transpiration rate ( T r ), stomatal conductance ( G s ), leaf vapor pressure deficit (VPD leaf ) and their influencing factors were studied to test the possible carbon assimilation strategies of the halophytes. P . australis had higher P n , T r , and G s than S . salsa and T . chinensis in both sites. Similar trends were found for leaf P and photosynthetic N and P efficiency (PNUE and PPUE, respectively) in one or both sites. By contrast, the leaf dry mass per area (LMA) increased in the order of P . australis < S . salsa < T . chinensis in both sites. For identical species in different sites, P n , leaf P, and PNUE were lower but T r , VPD leaf , leaf N, leaf N:P, and PPUE were higher in site 1 than in site 2 for one or more halophytes. Although soil physicochemical properties in different sites explained several variations among the halophytes, two-way ANOVA indicated that the species can explain most of the leaf traits compared with the site. LMA also had significant nonlinear relationships with P n , T r , G s , and VPD leaf . PNUE and PPUE showed positive correlation with P n in both sites, but they decreased in the power-law function with increasing LMA. Overall, the redundancy analysis showed that the gas exchange capacity of the halophytic plant communities was significantly affected by PPUE (60.0% of explanation), PNUE (57.1%), LMA (35.0%), leaf P (22.0%), and soil N (15.8%).

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here