Leaf morphological traits show greater responses to changes in climate than leaf physiological traits and gas exchange variables

Author:

Everingham Susan E.1234ORCID,Offord Catherine A.2ORCID,Sabot Manon E. B.56ORCID,Moles Angela T.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences UNSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. The Australian Institute of Botanical Science, The Australian PlantBank, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, Australian Botanic Garden Mount Annan Mount Annan New South Wales Australia

3. Institute of Plant Sciences University of Bern Bern Switzerland

4. Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern Switzerland

5. Climate Change Research Centre UNSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes UNSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractAdaptation to changing conditions is one of the strategies plants may use to survive in the face of climate change. We aimed to determine whether plants' leaf morphological and physiological traits/gas exchange variables have changed in response to recent, anthropogenic climate change. We grew seedlings from resurrected historic seeds from ex‐situ seed banks and paired modern seeds in a common‐garden experiment. Species pairs were collected from regions that had undergone differing levels of climate change using an emerging framework—Climate Contrast Resurrection Ecology, allowing us to hypothesise that regions with greater changes in climate (including temperature, precipitation, climate variability and climatic extremes) would be greater trait responses in leaf morphology and physiology over time. Our study found that in regions where there were greater changes in climate, there were greater changes in average leaf area, leaf margin complexity, leaf thickness and leaf intrinsic water use efficiency. Changes in leaf roundness, photosynthetic rate, stomatal density and the leaf economic strategy of our species were not correlated with changes in climate. Our results show that leaves do have the ability to respond to changes in climate, however, there are greater inherited responses in morphological leaf traits than in physiological traits/variables and greater responses to extreme measures of climate than gradual changes in climatic means. It is vital for accurate predictions of species' responses to impending climate change to ensure that future climate change ecology studies utilise knowledge about the difference in both leaf trait and gas exchange responses and the climate variables that they respond to.

Funder

Australian Research Council

University of New South Wales

Ecological Society of Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Reference100 articles.

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