The double-edged sword of potassium and sodium fertilization in xylem embolism resistance of two Eucalyptus species under drought stress

Author:

Mateus Nikolas Souza12ORCID,Perez-Martinez Victoria2ORCID,Lavres Jose1ORCID,Tissue David T23ORCID,Choat Brendan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Nuclear Energy in Agriculture, University of São Paulo , Piracicaba, São Paulo , Brazil

2. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University , Richmond, NSW , Australia

3. Global Centre for Land-Based Innovation, Hawkesbury Campus, Western Sydney University , Richmond, NSW , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Sodium (Na+) is a beneficial element for most plants and may replace potassium (K+) in osmoregulatory process to a certain extent, increasing plant water use efficiency. Thus, understanding coordinated mechanisms underlying the combined use of K+ and Na+ in tree drought tolerance is a key challenge for forestry in dealing with productivity and water limitations. A pot experiment with three ratios of K/Na (K-supplied, partial K replacement by Na, and K-deficient plants) and two water regimes, well-watered (W+) and water-stressed (W−), was conducted on saplings of two Eucalyptus species with contrasting drought sensitivities. We evaluated the point of stomatal closure (Pgs90), xylem water potential at 12, 50, and 88% embolized xylem area (P12, P50, P88), hydraulic safety margin, leaf gas exchange (A, E, gs, and dark respiration), pre-dawn and midday leaf water potential (ΨPD and ΨMD), long-term water use efficiency (WUEL) and total dry mass. Partial K replacement by Na increased leaf gas exchange, WUEL, and total dry mass, while Pgs90, P12, P50, P88, and ΨMD decreased (were more negative), compared with plants exclusively supplied with K and K-deficient plants of both species. Fertilized plants had narrower hydraulic safety margins than K-deficient plants, indicating that these Eucalyptus species adopt the functional adaptive strategy of operating close to their hydraulic limits to maximize carbon uptake while increasing the risk of hydraulic failure under drought stress.

Funder

São Paulo Research Foundation

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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