Save or spend? Diverging water‐use strategies of grasses and encroaching clonal shrubs

Author:

Keen R. M.123ORCID,Helliker B. R.4ORCID,McCulloh K. A.5ORCID,Nippert J. B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

2. Kansas Biological Survey and Center for Ecological Research University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

4. Department of Biology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Botany University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

Abstract Shrub encroachment is one of the primary threats to mesic grasslands around the world. This dramatic shift in plant cover has the potential to alter ecosystem‐scale water budgets and responses to novel rainfall regimes. Understanding divergent water‐use strategies among encroaching shrubs and the grasses they replace is critical for predicting shifts in ecosystem‐scale water dynamics as a result of shrub encroachment, particularly if drought events become more frequent and/or severe in the future. In this study, we assessed how water‐use traits of a rapidly encroaching clonal shrub (Cornus drummondii) and a dominant C4 grass (Andropogon gerardii) impact responses to changes in water availability in tallgrass prairie. We assessed intra‐annual change in depth of water uptake, turgor loss point and stomatal regulation in each species. Sampling took place at Konza Prairie Biological Station (northeastern KS, USA) during the 2021 and 2022 growing seasons. Cornus drummondii shifted from shallow to deep soil water sources across the 2021 and 2022 growing seasons. This plasticity in depth of water uptake facilitated a ‘wasteful’ water‐use strategy in C. drummondii, where stomatal conductance and transpiration rates continued to increase even when no further gain in photosynthetic rate occurred. A. gerardii photosynthetic rates and stomatal conductance were more variable through time and were more responsive to changes in leaf water potential than C. drummondii. However, intra‐annual adjustment of turgor loss point was more pronounced in C. drummondiiπTLP = −0.48 MPa ± 0.15 SD) than in A. gerardiiπTLP = −0.29 MPa ± 0.19 SD). Synthesis. These results suggest that C. drummondii is highly resilient to changes in water availability in surface soils and will likely remain unaffected by future droughts unless they are severe enough to reduce the availability of deep soil water. Given that clonal shrubs are key invaders of grasslands world‐wide, increased leaf‐level water loss is expected to accelerate ecosystem‐level drying as clonal shrub encroachment proceeds in mesic grasslands.

Funder

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

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