Pushing the envelope: do narrowly and widely distributed Eucalyptus species differ in response to climate warming?

Author:

Drake John E.1ORCID,Vårhammar Angelica2ORCID,Aspinwall Michael J.3ORCID,Pfautsch Sebastian4ORCID,Ghannoum Oula2ORCID,Tissue David T.2ORCID,Tjoelker Mark G.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sustainable Resources Management, College of Environmental Science and Forestry State University of New York 1 Forestry Drive Syracuse NY 13210 USA

2. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Locked Bag 1797 Penrith NSW 2751 Australia

3. Formation Environmental LLC Sacramento CA 95816 USA

4. Urban Transformations Research Centre Western Sydney University Locked Bag 1797 Penrith 2751 NSW Australia

Abstract

Summary Contemporary climate change will push many tree species into conditions that are outside their current climate envelopes. Using the Eucalyptus genus as a model, we addressed whether species with narrower geographical distributions show constrained ability to cope with warming relative to species with wider distributions, and whether this ability differs among species from tropical and temperate climates. We grew seedlings of widely and narrowly distributed Eucalyptus species from temperate and tropical Australia in a glasshouse under two temperature regimes: the summer temperature at seed origin and +3.5°C. We measured physical traits and leaf‐level gas exchange to assess warming influences on growth rates, allocation patterns, and physiological acclimation capacity. Warming generally stimulated growth, such that higher relative growth rates early in development placed seedlings on a trajectory of greater mass accumulation. The growth enhancement under warming was larger among widely than narrowly distributed species and among temperate rather than tropical provenances. The differential growth enhancement was primarily attributable to leaf area production and adjustments of specific leaf area. Our results suggest that tree species, including those with climate envelopes that will be exceeded by contemporary climate warming, possess capacity to physiologically acclimate but may have varying ability to adjust morphology.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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