A continental-scale analysis reveals the latitudinal gradient of stomatal density across amphistomatous species: evolutionary history vs. present-day environment

Author:

Liu Congcong123,Huang Kexiang12,Zhao Yifei12,Li Ying3,He Nianpeng45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Ecology and Environment in Minority Areas (Minzu University of China), National Ethnic Affairs Commission , Beijing 100081 , China

2. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Minzu University of China , Beijing 100081 , China

3. Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100101 , China

4. Key Laboratory of Sustainable Forest Ecosystem Management-Ministry of Education, Northeast Forestry University , Harbin 150040 , China

5. Earth Critical Zone and Flux Research Station of Xing’an Mountains, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Daxing’anling 165200 , China

Abstract

Abstract Background and Aims Amphistomy is a potential method for increasing photosynthetic rate; however, the latitudinal gradients of stomatal density across amphistomatous species and their drivers remain unknown. Methods Here, the adaxial stomatal density (SDad) and abaxial stomatal density (SDab) of 486 amphistomatous species–site combinations, belonging to 32 plant families, were collected from China, and their total stomatal density (SDtotal) and stomatal ratio (SR) were calculated. Key Results Overall, these four stomatal traits did not show significant phylogenetic signals. There were no significant differences in SDab and SDtotal between woody and herbaceous species, but SDad and SR were higher in woody species than in herbaceous species. Besides, a significantly positive relationship between SDab and SDad was observed. We also found that stomatal density (including SDab, SDad and SDtotal) decreased with latitude, whereas SR increased with latitude, and temperature seasonality was the most important environmental factor driving it. Besides, evolutionary history (represented by both phylogeny and species) explained ~10- to 22-fold more of the variation in stomatal traits than the present-day environment (65.2–71.1 vs. 2.9–6.8 %). Conclusions Our study extended our knowledge of trait–environment relationships and highlighted the importance of evolutionary history in driving stomatal trait variability.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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