Allometric relationships between leaf and petiole traits across 31 floating-leaved plants reveal a different adaptation pattern from terrestrial plants

Author:

Liu Yang123ORCID,Liu Hui45ORCID,Baastrup-Spohr Lars3,Li Zhizhong1,Li Wei617ORCID,Pan Junfeng8,Cao Yu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Aquatic Plants Research Center, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Wuhan 430074 , China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100049 , China

3. Freshwater Biological Laboratory, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen 2100 , Denmark

4. Key Laboratory of Vegetation Restoration and Management of Degraded Ecosystem, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Guangzhou 510650 , China

5. South China National Botanical Garden , Guangzhou 510650 , China

6. Research Center for Ecology, College of Science, Tibet University , Lhasa 850000 , China

7. Center for Plant Ecology, Core Botanical Gardens, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Wuhan 430074 , China

8. Horticulture and Conservation Centre, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Wuhan 430074 , China

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsAllometric scaling between stomata and xylem for terrestrial woody plants is a widely observed pattern that may be constrained by water transport. Floating-leaved plants, a particular life form of aquatic plants, have leaves in direct contact with both air and water and a poorly developed xylem that may not be limited by water supply as for terrestrial plants. However, whether such an allometric scaling relationship still exists in floating-leaved plants has not been explored.MethodsWe analysed 31 floating-leaved species/varieties with a range in leaf area covering six orders of magnitude. For all 31 floating-leaved plants, we studied the allometric relationships between leaf area and petiole transverse area, and between total stomatal area and petiole vascular area.Key ResultsThe slopes of both relationships were similar to the slope of the allometric relationship (1.23) between total stomatal area and xylem area of 53 terrestrial plants. However, for ten of them with xylem that can be clearly defined, the strong positive relationship between total stomatal area and petiole xylem area had a significantly smaller slope than that of terrestrial plants (0.64 vs. 1.23). Furthermore, after considering phylogeny, the scaling relationships between total stomatal area and petiole traits in floating-leaved plants remained significant.ConclusionsWe speculated that for floating-leaved plants, the hyperallometric relationship (slope >1) between the construction of leaf/stoma and petiole was promoted by the high demand for photosynthesis and thus more leaves/stomata. While the hypoallometric relationship (slope <1) between stomatal and xylem area was related more to hydraulic processes, the selection pressure on stomata was lower than xylem of floating-leaved plants. Allometric relationships among the hydraulic traits on water transport of aquatic plants are the result of natural selection to achieve maximum carbon gain, which is similar to terrestrial plants.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Scholarship Council

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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