Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Sciences University of California, Davis Davis CA 95616 USA
Abstract
Summary
Optimality‐based models of stomatal conductance unify biophysical and evolutionary constraints and can improve predictions of land‐atmosphere carbon and water exchange. Recent models incorporate hydraulic constraints by penalizing excessive stomatal opening in relation to hydraulic damage caused by low water potentials. We used simulation models to test whether penalties based solely on vulnerability curves adequately represent the optimality hypothesis, given that they exclude the effects of kinetic factors on stomatal behavior and integrated carbon balance.
To quantify the effects of nonsteady‐state phenomena on the landscape of short‐term hydraulic risk, we simulated diurnal dynamics of leaf physiology for 10 000 patches of leaf in a canopy and used a ray‐tracing model, Helios, to simulate realistic variation in sunfleck dynamics.
Our simulations demonstrated that kinetic parameters of leaf physiology and sunfleck properties influence the economic landscape of short‐term hydraulic risk, as characterized by the effect of stomatal strategy (gauged by the water potential causing a 50% hydraulic penalty) on both aggregated carbon gain and the aggregated carbon cost of short‐term hydraulic risk.
Hydraulic penalties in optimization models should be generalized to allow their parameters to account for kinetic factors, in addition to parameters of hydraulic vulnerability.
Funder
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka
Cited by
6 articles.
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