Abstract
Dense leaf trichomes can directly decrease gas fluxes through increased
gas diffusion resistance and indirectly increase gas fluxes through
increased leaf temperature due to increased heat diffusion resistance,
which may contribute to adaptation to dry and/or low‐temperature
conditions. However, it remains unclear whether the leaf‐trichome
resistance increases or decreases the gas‐exchange rates through
combined direct and indirect effects. We focused on Metrosideros
polymorpha, a dominant tree species inhabiting a large range of
environmental gradients in the Hawaiian Islands, whose leaves have an
enormous variation in trichome thickness on the lower surface. In five
elevational sites, we measured leaf morphological and physiological
traits including trichome thickness, gas‐exchange characteristics, and
leaf temperature. The trichome thickness was largest in the coldest and
driest site and thinnest at the wettest site. Leaf temperature was
significantly increased with trichome thickness. With biophysical and
physiological models, we show that leaf trichomes can increase the daily
photosynthesis through increasing leaf temperature only in the cold
alpine area. The daily water‐use efficiency can be lower with increasing
leaf trichomes at any elevational sites. Therefore, in terms of
diffusion resistance, the leaf trichomes of M. polymorpha can
contribute to the adaptation to low‐temperature environments but not to
dry environments.
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4 articles.
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