Stomatal sensitivity to vapor pressure deficit and its relationship to hydraulic conductance in Pinus palustris

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Abstract

We studied the response of stomatal conductance at leaf (gs) and canopy (Gs) scales to increasing vapor pressure deficit (D) in mature Pinus palustris Mill. (longleaf pine) growing in a sandhill habitat in the coastal plain of the southeastern USA. Specifically, we determined if variation in the stomatal response to D was related to variation in hydraulic conductance along the soil-to-leaf pathway (KL) over the course of a growing season. Reductions in KL were associated with a severe growing season drought that significantly reduced soil water content (θ) in the upper 90-cm soil profile. Although KL recovered partially following the drought, it never reached pre-drought values. Stomatal sensitivity to D was well correlated with maximum gs at low D at both leaf and canopy scales, and KL appeared to influence this response by controlling maximum gs. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that stomatal response to D occurs to regulate minimum leaf water potential, and that the sensitivity of this response is related to changes in whole-plant hydraulics.

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Addington, R. N., Mitchell, R. J., Oren, R., & Donovan, L. A. (2004). Stomatal sensitivity to vapor pressure deficit and its relationship to hydraulic conductance in Pinus palustris. Tree Physiology, 24(5), 561–569. https://doi.org/10.1093/treephys/24.5.561

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