Canopy temperatures strongly overestimate leaf thermal safety margins of tropical trees

Author:

Manzi Olivier Jean Leonce12ORCID,Wittemann Maria1ORCID,Dusenge Mirindi Eric13ORCID,Habimana Jacques1ORCID,Manishimwe Aloysie14ORCID,Mujawamariya Myriam14ORCID,Ntirugulirwa Bonaventure1456ORCID,Zibera Etienne17ORCID,Tarvainen Lasse1ORCID,Nsabimana Donat8,Wallin Göran1ORCID,Uddling Johan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Gothenburg PO Box 463 Gothenburg SE‐405 30 Sweden

2. Integrated Polytechnic Regional College‐Kitabi Rwanda Polytechnic PO Box 330 Huye Rwanda

3. Department of Biology Mount Allison University Sackville NB E4L 1E4 Canada

4. Department of Biology, College of Science and Technology University of Rwanda Avenue de l'Armée, PO Box 3900 Kigali Rwanda

5. Rwanda Agriculture and Animal Resources Development Board PO Box 5016 Kigali Rwanda

6. Rwanda Forestry Authority PO Box 46 Muhanga Rwanda

7. School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, College of Agriculture, Animal Sciences and Veterinary Medicine University of Rwanda PO Box 210 Musanze Rwanda

8. School of Forestry and Biodiversity Conservation, College of Agriculture, Animal Sciences and Veterinary Medicine University of Rwanda PO Box 210 Musanze Rwanda

Abstract

Summary Current estimates of temperature effects on plants mostly rely on air temperature, although it can significantly deviate from leaf temperature (Tleaf). To address this, some studies have used canopy temperature (Tcan). However, Tcan fails to capture the fine‐scale variation in Tleaf among leaves and species in diverse canopies. We used infrared radiometers to study Tleaf and Tcan and how they deviate from air temperature (ΔTleaf and ΔTcan) in multispecies tropical tree plantations at three sites along an elevation and temperature gradient in Rwanda. Our results showed high Tleaf (up to c. 50°C) and ΔTleaf (on average 8–10°C and up to c. 20°C) of sun‐exposed leaves during 10:00 h–15:00 h, being close to or exceeding photosynthetic heat tolerance thresholds. These values greatly exceeded simultaneously measured values of Tcan and ΔTcan, respectively, leading to strongly overestimated leaf thermal safety margins if basing those on Tcan data. Stomatal conductance and leaf size affected Tleaf and Tcan in line with their expected influences on leaf energy balance. Our findings highlight the importance of leaf traits for leaf thermoregulation and show that monitoring Tcan is not enough to capture the peak temperatures and heat stress experienced by individual leaves of different species in tropical forest canopies.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Publisher

Wiley

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