INVESTIGADORES
BUCCI Sandra Janet
artículos
Título:
Functional convergence in hydraulic architecture and water relations of tropical savanna trees: from leaf to whole plant
Autor/es:
S.J. BUCCI, G. GOLDSTEIN, F.C. MEINZER, F.G. SCHOLZ, A.C. FRANCO AND M. BUSTAMANTE
Revista:
TREE PHYSIOLOGY
Editorial:
Heron Publishing
Referencias:
Lugar: Victoria, Canada; Año: 2004 vol. 24 p. 891 - 899
ISSN:
0829-318X
Resumen:
Functional convergence in hydraulic architecture and water relations, and potential trade offs in resource allocation were investigated in several individuals of six dominant neotropical savanna tree species from central Brazil during the peak of the dry season. Common relationships between wood density and several aspects of plant-water relations and hydraulic architecture were observed. All species and individuals shared the same negative exponential relationship between sapwood saturated water content and wood density. Wood density was a good predictor of minimum (midday) leaf water potential and total daily transpiration, both of which decreased linearly with increasing wood density in a similar fashion across all individuals and species. With respect to hydraulic architecture, specific and leaf-specific hydraulic conductivity decreased, and the leaf area:sapwood area ratio increased more than 5-fold as wood density increased from 0.37 to 0.71 g cm-3 across all individuals and species. Wood density was also a good predictor of the temporal dynamics of water flow in stems, with the time of onset of sap flow in the morning and the maximum sap flow tending to occur progressively earlier in the day as wood density increased. Leaf properties associated with wood density included stomatal conductance, specific leaf area, and osmotic potential at turgor loss point, which decreased linearly with increasing wood density. Wood density increased linearly with decreasing bulk soil water potential experienced by individual plants during the dry season, suggesting that wood density was greatest in individuals with mostly shallow roots, and therefore limited access to more abundant soil water at greater depths. Despite their taxonomic diversity and large intrapopulation differences in architectural traits, the six co-occurring species and their individuals shared similar functional relationships between all pairs of variables studied. Thus, rather than differing intrinsically in physiological responsiveness, the species and their individuals appeared to have distinct operating ranges along common physiological response curves dictated by plant architectural and structural features. The patterns of water uptake and access to soil water during the dry season appeared to be the main determinant of wood density, which constrained evolutionary options related to plant water economy and hydraulic architecture, leading to functional convergence in the neotropical savanna trees studied.