Wood‐density has no effect on stomatal control of leaf‐level water use efficiency in an Amazonian forest

Author:

Lamour Julien12ORCID,Souza Daisy C.3ORCID,Gimenez Bruno O.34ORCID,Higuchi Niro3ORCID,Chave Jérôme2ORCID,Chambers Jeffrey4ORCID,Rogers Alistair1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental & Climate Sciences Brookhaven National Laboratory Upton New York USA

2. Evolution and Biological Diversity (EDB) CNRS/IRD/UPS Toulouse France

3. National Institute of Amazonian Research (INPA) Forest Management Laboratory (LMF) Manaus Amazonas Brazil

4. Department of Geography University of California Berkeley California USA

Abstract

AbstractForest disturbances increase the proportion of fast‐growing tree species compared to slow‐growing ones. To understand their relative capacity for carbon uptake and their vulnerability to climate change, and to represent those differences in Earth system models, it is necessary to characterise the physiological differences in their leaf‐level control of water use efficiency and carbon assimilation. We used wood density as a proxy for the fast‐slow growth spectrum and tested the assumption that trees with a low wood density (LWD) have a lower water‐use efficiency than trees with a high wood density (HWD). We selected 5 LWD tree species and 5 HWD tree species growing in the same location in an Amazonian tropical forest and measured in situ steady‐state gas exchange on top‐of‐canopy leaves with parallel sampling and measurement of leaf mass area and leaf nitrogen content. We found that LWD species invested more nitrogen in photosynthetic capacity than HWD species, had higher photosynthetic rates and higher stomatal conductance. However, contrary to expectations, we showed that the stomatal control of the balance between transpiration and carbon assimilation was similar in LWD and HWD species and that they had the same dark respiration rates.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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