Arid
Effects of plant size on photosynthesis and water relations in the desert shrub Prosopis glandulosa (Fabaceae)
DESoyza, AG; Franc, AC; Virginia, RA; Reynolds, JE; Whitford, WG
来源期刊AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
ISSN0002-9122
出版年1996
卷号83期号:1页码:99-105
英文摘要

The Jornada del Muerto basin of the Chihuahuan Desert of southern New Mexico, USA, has undergone a marked transition of plant communities. Shrubs such as mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa) have greatly increased or now dominate in areas that were previously dominated by perennial grasses. The replacement of grasses by shrubs requires an establishment phase where small shrubs must compete directly with similar-sized grass plants. This is followed by a phase in which large, established shrubs sequester nutrients and water within their biomass and alter soil resources directly under their canopy, creating ’’islands’’ of fertility. We hypothesized that these two phases were associated with shrubs having different physiological response capacities related to their age or size and the resource structure of the environment. As a corollary, we hypothesized that responses of small shrubs would be more tightly coupled to variation in soil moisture availability compared to large shrubs. To test these hypotheses, we studied gas exchange and water relations of small (establishing) and large (established) shrubs growing in the Jornada del Muerto as a function of varying soil moisture during the season. The small shrubs had greater net assimilation, stomatal conductance, transpiration, and xylem water potential than large shrubs following high summer rainfall in July, and highest seasonal soil moisture at 0.3 m. High rates of carbon assimilation and water use would be an advantage for small shrubs competing with grasses when shallow soil moisture was plentiful. Large shrubs had greater net assimilation and water-use efficiency, and lower xylem water potential than small shrubs following a dry period in September, when soil moisture at 0.3 m was lowest. Low xylem water potentials and high water-use efficiency would allow large shrubs to continue acquiring and conserving water as soil moisture is depleted. Although the study provides evidence of differences in physiological responses of different-sized shrubs, there was not support for the hypothesis that small shrubs are more closely coupled to variation in soil moisture availability than large shrubs. Small shrubs may actually be less coupled to soil moisture than large shrubs, and thus avoid conditions when continued transpiration could not be matched by equivalent water uptake.


英文关键词Chihuahuan Desert Fabaceae photosynthesis plant size Prosopis glandulosa shrub water relations
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; BRAZIL
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:A1996TQ26600014
WOS关键词MESQUITE
WOS类目Plant Sciences
WOS研究方向Plant Sciences
来源机构New Mexico State University
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/132234
作者单位(1)DARTMOUTH COLL,ENVIRONM STUDIES PROGRAM,HANOVER,NH 03755;(2)NEW MEXICO STATE UNIV,DEPT BIOL,LAS CRUCES,NM 88003;(3)UNIV BRASILIA,DEPT BOT,BR-70919 BRASILIA,DF,BRAZIL;(4)DUKE UNIV,DEPT BOT,DURHAM,NC 27708;(5)US EPA,ENVIRONM MONITORING SYST LAB,LAS VEGAS,NV 89193
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DESoyza, AG,Franc, AC,Virginia, RA,et al. Effects of plant size on photosynthesis and water relations in the desert shrub Prosopis glandulosa (Fabaceae)[J]. New Mexico State University,1996,83(1):99-105.
APA DESoyza, AG,Franc, AC,Virginia, RA,Reynolds, JE,&Whitford, WG.(1996).Effects of plant size on photosynthesis and water relations in the desert shrub Prosopis glandulosa (Fabaceae).AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY,83(1),99-105.
MLA DESoyza, AG,et al."Effects of plant size on photosynthesis and water relations in the desert shrub Prosopis glandulosa (Fabaceae)".AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 83.1(1996):99-105.
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