Anatomical traits explain drought response of seedlings from wet tropical forests

Author:

Jhaveri Rishiddh12ORCID,Cannanbilla Lakshmipriya13,Bhat K. S. Arpitha45,Sankaran Mahesh6,Krishnadas Meghna16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CSIR – Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology Hyderabad India

2. Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR) Ghaziabad India

3. Chair of Plant Ecology University of Bayreuth Bayreuth Germany

4. Department of Life Science Bangalore University Bangalore India

5. Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE) Bangalore India

6. National Centre for Biological Sciences, TIFR Bangalore India

Abstract

AbstractWater availability regulates plant community dynamics but the drought response of seedlings remains poorly known, despite their vulnerability, especially for the Asian tropics. In particular, discerning how functional traits of seedlings mediate drought response can aid generalizable predictions of tree responses to global environmental change. We assessed interspecific variation in drought response explained by above‐ and below‐ground seedling traits. We conducted a dry‐down experiment in the greenhouse using 16 tree species from the humid forests of Western Ghats in southern India, chosen to represent differences in affinity to conditions of high and low seasonal drought (seasonality affiliation). We compared survival, growth, and photosynthetic performance under drought and well‐watered conditions and assessed the extent to which species' responses were explained by seasonality affiliation and 12 traits of root, stem and leaf. We found that the species from seasonally dry forest reduced photosynthetic rate in drought compared with well‐watered conditions, but seasonality affiliation did not explain differences in growth and survival. Performance in drought vs well‐watered conditions were best explained by anatomical traits of xylem, veins and stomata. Species with larger xylem reduced their growth and photosynthesis to tolerate desiccation. In drought, species with smaller stomata correlated with lower survival even though photosynthetic activity decreased by a larger extent with larger stomata. Overall, anatomical traits of xylem and stomata, directly related to water transport and gas‐exchange, played a more prominent role than commonly used traits (e.g., specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content) in explaining species response to drought, and may offer a good proxy for physiological traits related to drought tolerance of seedlings.

Funder

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

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