Plant hydraulics accentuates the effects of atmospheric moisture stress on transpiration

Author(s):  
Alexandra Konings ◽  
Yanlan Liu ◽  
Mukesh Kumar ◽  
Xue Feng ◽  
Gabriel Katul

<p>Transpiration directly links the water, energy and carbon cycles. It is commonly restricted by soil (through soil moisture) and atmospheric (through vapor pressure deficit, VPD) moisture stresses governed by the movement of water through plants, also known as plant hydraulics. These sources of moisture stress are likely to diverge under climate change, with globally enhanced VPD due to increased air temperatures but more variable and uncertain changes in soil moisture. In most Earth system and land surface models, the ET response to each of the two stresses is evaluated through independent empirical relations, while neglecting plant hydraulics. Comparison of these two models is challenged by the difficulty of ensuring any perceived differences are due to the model structure, not an imperfect parametrization. Here, we use a model-data fusion approach applied to long-term ET records collected at 40 sites across a diverse range of biomes to demonstrate that the widely used empirical approach underestimates ET sensitivity to VPD, but compensates by overestimating the sensitivity to soil moisture stress. The bias originates from the joint control of leaf water potential on plant response to soil moisture and VPD stress. To a lesser degree, it also overestimates from increased sensitivity to VPD under dry (low leaf water potential) conditions in the plant hydraulic model. As a result, a hydraulic model captures ET under high-VPD conditions for wide-ranging soil moisture states better than the empirical approach does. Our findings highlight the central role of plant hydraulics in regulating the increasing importance of atmospheric moisture stress on biosphere-atmosphere interactions under elevated temperatures.</p>

1981 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Misra ◽  
P. C. Pant

SUMMARYA field experiment evaluating criteria for scheduling wheat irrigation was conducted from 1975 to 1977 in a sandy loam soil with treatments scheduled according to physiological stages, soil moisture conditions, pan evaporation and leaf water potential. Grain and straw yields, spikes/m, fertile spikelets/spike and number and weight of grains/spike were significantly influenced by treatments. Irrigation based on leaf water potential was as good as when based on physiological stages or soil moisture, and the use of pan evaporation was no better than other methods of scheduling.


CORD ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 34
Author(s):  
Vidhana Arachchi L P

An investigation on the ability ofdifferent types of mulches to conserve soil moisture and their effect on coconutpalm (Dwarfx Tall; CRIC 65) was carried out in Madampe soil series at Bandirripuwa Estate, Lunuwila located in agro ecological region of IL3 of Sri Lanka. Different types ofmulches compared in this study were dried coconut fronds and leaves, cover crop with Pueraria phasioloides and Brachiaria milliformis versus bare soil (Control). Soil moisture status was monitored using the neutron scattering technique. Leaf water potential of coconut with respect to different treatments was also monitored during dryperiod   Results showed that Brachiaria milliformis and Pueraria phasioloides extracted significantly (p<0.001) more waterfrom soils than diied mulch and the control. The amount of water extracted in the above treatments were 74.4Yo, 62.5Yo, 59.79yo and 61.3% respectively. However, the extraction was not significantly different when the rainfall was greater than 100 mm. About 33 mm of water retained in Brachiaria milliformis introduced soil profiles even by the end of dry period Water losses by Pueraria phasioloides grown plots, specially through evapotranspiration, were 1higher in initial stages of the dry period, but later stage losses were lower than that of Brachiaria due to defoliation of Pueraria leaves during severe dry period Leaf water potential of coconut with respect to stress conditions of different treatments revealed that Pueraria phasioloides and Brachiaria milliformis did not adversely affect coconut palm grown in Madampe series, although those live materials extracted more waterfrom soilprofile compared to the other treatments. In general, dry mulching wasfound to be the most efficient moisture conservative practice that can be adoptedfor coconut lands.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phillip Papastefanou ◽  
Christian Zang ◽  
Thomas Pugh ◽  
Daijun Liu ◽  
David Lapola ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;The Amazon rainforest has been hit by extreme drought events in recent decades. Thereby, plant hydraulics are essential to better understand the impacts of droughts on single plants and whole forest ecosystems. Plant hydraulic mechanisms such as stomatal closure and leaf water potential are very complex, still posing challenges for current vegetation model development and parameterization. Here, we present the new hydraulic architecture of the Dynamic Global Vegetation Model LPJ-GUESS, accounting for leaf stomatal responses to plant water status and subsequent drought-induced mortality. We show that when applying the model to the Amazon rainforest we can reproduce the observed increasing trend in carbon losses and the decreasing trend in net carbon sink from plot observations over the past two decades. Our model simulations suggest that the increasing historical trend in carbon losses from mortality can be explained by hydraulic failure and associated mortality.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The high biodiversity of the Amazon tropical rainforest poses further challenges for process-based models. Here we present an approach to include the diversity of plant responses to drought by simulating 37 individual Plant Functional Types (PFTs) differing in their leaf water potential regulation- and resistance to soil water stress, and provide a simple solution how to cover a wide range of species and species-specific parameters. Future modelling studies should also take species interaction and competition of different hydraulic strategies into account.&lt;/p&gt;


Trees ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 0263 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Mielke ◽  
M. A. Oliva ◽  
N.F. de Barros ◽  
R. M. Penchel ◽  
C. A. Martinez ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Thitiporn Machikowa ◽  
Thirasak Thong-ob ◽  
Sodchol Wonprasaid

The aims of this research were to investigate the effects of soil moisture on cassava growth and physiological processes and to determine the critical soil moisture contents. To fulifll the research objectives, cassava was grown under five levels of soil moisture, including 50, 40, 30 and 20% of soil available water holding capacity (AWHC) along with control (no irrigation). Physiological traits and plant growth parameters were measured. The results showed that cassava grown under 50% of AWHC exhibited the highest photosynthesis rate, stomatal conductance, predawn leaf water potential and chlorophyll activity. All physiological traits decreased significantly when the moisture content was less than 40 and 20% of AWHC in sandy clay loam and loamy sand soil, respectively. Predawn leaf water potential was used to determine the critical point of soil moisture. It was found that the critical soil moisture contents were 39.0 and 15.7% of AWHC in sandy clay loam and loamy sand soil, respectively.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Euriel Mill�n-Romero ◽  
Andr�s Mass-Cruz ◽  
Yerye Chajin-Salcedo ◽  
Carlos Mill�n-P�ramo ◽  
◽  
...  

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