stomatal control
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2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinyi Wu ◽  
Ting Sun ◽  
Wenzhao Xu ◽  
Yudong Sun ◽  
Baogen Wang ◽  
...  

Drought is one of the most devasting and frequent abiotic stresses in agriculture. While many morphological, biochemical and physiological indicators are being used to quantify plant drought responses, stomatal control, and hence the transpiration and photosynthesis regulation through it, is of particular importance in marking the plant capacity of balancing stress response and yield. Due to the difficulties in simultaneous, large-scale measurement of stomatal traits such as sensitivity and speed of stomatal closure under progressive soil drought, forward genetic mapping of these important behaviors has long been unavailable. The recent emerging phenomic technologies offer solutions to identify the water relations of whole plant and assay the stomatal regulation in a dynamic process at the population level. Here, we report high-throughput physiological phenotyping of water relations of 106 cowpea accessions under progressive drought stress, which, in combination of genome-wide association study (GWAS), enables genetic mapping of the complex, stomata-related drought responsive traits “critical soil water content” (θcri) and “slope of transpiration rate declining” (KTr). The 106 accessions showed large variations in θcri and KTr, indicating that they had broad spectrum of stomatal control in response to soil water deficit, which may confer them different levels of drought tolerance. Univariate GWAS identified six and fourteen significant SNPs associated with θcri and KTr, respectively. The detected SNPs distributed in nine chromosomes and accounted for 8.7–21% of the phenotypic variation, suggesting that both stomatal sensitivity to soil drought and the speed of stomatal closure to completion were controlled by multiple genes with moderate effects. Multivariate GWAS detected ten more significant SNPs in addition to confirming eight of the twenty SNPs as detected by univariate GWAS. Integrated, a final set of 30 significant SNPs associated with stomatal closure were reported. Taken together, our work, by combining phenomics and genetics, enables forward genetic mapping of the genetic architecture of stomatal traits related to drought tolerance, which not only provides a basis for molecular breeding of drought resistant cultivars of cowpea, but offers a new methodology to explore the genetic determinants of water budgeting in crops under stressful conditions in the phenomics era.


Oecologia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Haworth ◽  
Giovanni Marino ◽  
Francesco Loreto ◽  
Mauro Centritto

AbstractStomata are central players in the hydrological and carbon cycles, regulating the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) for photosynthesis and transpirative loss of water (H2O) between plants and the atmosphere. The necessity to balance water-loss and CO2-uptake has played a key role in the evolution of plants, and is increasingly important in a hotter and drier world. The conductance of CO2 and water vapour across the leaf surface is determined by epidermal and stomatal morphology (the number, size, and spacing of stomatal pores) and stomatal physiology (the regulation of stomatal pore aperture in response to environmental conditions). The proportion of the epidermis allocated to stomata and the evolution of amphistomaty are linked to the physiological function of stomata. Moreover, the relationship between stomatal density and [CO2] is mediated by physiological stomatal behaviour; species with less responsive stomata to light and [CO2] are most likely to adjust stomatal initiation. These differences in the sensitivity of the stomatal density—[CO2] relationship between species influence the efficacy of the ‘stomatal method’ that is widely used to infer the palaeo-atmospheric [CO2] in which fossil leaves developed. Many studies have investigated stomatal physiology or morphology in isolation, which may result in the loss of the ‘overall picture’ as these traits operate in a coordinated manner to produce distinct mechanisms for stomatal control. Consideration of the interaction between stomatal morphology and physiology is critical to our understanding of plant evolutionary history, plant responses to on-going climate change and the production of more efficient and climate-resilient food and bio-fuel crops.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng-Hong Tan ◽  
Fang-Jun Ding ◽  
Yan-Hui Liu ◽  
Peng Wu ◽  
Wen-Jun Zhao ◽  
...  

Abstract Masson pine (Pinus massoniana) is a tree species widely planted in central and south China. In the present pioneer study, we reported about our two years of carbon flux observations over an even-aged pure Masson pine stand. Light intensity could explain nearly half (47%) of the variance in daytime net ecosystem exchange (NEE). Daytime dark respiration was lower than nighttime NEE, suggesting a possible effect of light inhibition on respiration. The mean annual NEE was -557 g C m-2 yr-1, which indicated that this stand is a medium to large carbon sink. This NEE estimates were defensive because we checked the data with thorough quality controls and in consistency with previous independent estimates. An unexpected seasonal pattern of NEE was observed with a clear reduction around the transitional period between summer and autumn (around July). This NEE reduction is probably a consequence of water stress induced stomatal control, and not of a decrease in light intensity. The updated optimal stomatal theory did not provide the best description of stomatal control in relation to photosynthesis. Whether this is a new emergent property of the ecosystem scale needs further investigation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. 2162-2170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bryan K. Place ◽  
Erin R. Delaria ◽  
Amy X. Liu ◽  
Ronald C. Cohen

2020 ◽  
Vol 287 ◽  
pp. 107953 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hang Xu ◽  
Zhiqiang Zhang ◽  
Jingfeng Xiao ◽  
Jiquan Chen ◽  
Mengxun Zhu ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deepanshu Khare ◽  
Gernot Bodner ◽  
Mathieu Javaux ◽  
Jan Vanderborght ◽  
Daniel Leitner ◽  
...  

<p>Plant transpiration and root water uptake are dependent on multiple traits that interact with site soil characteristics and environmental factors such as radiation, atmospheric temperature, relative humidity, and soil-moisture content. Models of root architecture and functions are increasingly employed to simulate root-soil interactions. Root water uptake is thereby affected by the root hydraulic architecture, soil moisture conditions, soil hydraulic properties, and the transpiration demand as controlled by atmospheric conditions. Stomatal conductance plays a vital role in regulating transpiration in plants. We performed simulations of plant water uptake for plants having different mechanisms to control transpiration, spanned by isohydric/anisohydric spectrum. Isohydric plants follow the strategy to close their stomata in order to maintain the leaf water potential at a constant level, while anisohydric plants leave their stomata open when leaf water potentials fall due to drought stress. Modelling the stomatal regulation effectively will result in a more reliable model that will regulate the excessive loss of water. We implemented hydraulic and chemical stomatal control<br>of root water uptake following the current approach where stomatal control is regulated by simulated water potential and/or chemical signal concentration. In order to maintain water uptake from dry soil, low plant water potentials are required, which may lead to reversible or permanent cavitation. We parameterise our model with field data, including climate data and soil hydraulic properties under different tillage conditions. This helps us to understand the behaviour of different crops under drought conditions and predict at which growing stage the stress hits the plant. We conducted the simulations for different scenarios to study the effect of hydraulic and chemical regulation on root system performance under drought stress.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 425-432
Author(s):  
Matthew Lanning ◽  
Lixin Wang ◽  
Kimberly A Novick

Abstract Accurate understanding of plant responses to water stress is increasingly important for quantification of ecosystem carbon and water cycling under future climates. Plant water-use strategies can be characterized across a spectrum of water stress responses, from tight stomatal control (isohydric) to distinctly less stomatal control (anisohydric). A recent and popular classification method of plant water-use strategies utilizes the regression slope of predawn and midday leaf water potentials, σ, to reflect the coupling of soil water availability (predawn leaf water potential) and stomatal dynamics (daily decline in leaf water potential). This type of classification is important in predicting ecosystem drought response and resiliency. However, it fails to explain the relative stomatal responses to drought of Acer sacharrum and Quercus alba, improperly ranking them on the spectrum of isohydricity. We argue this inconsistency may be in part due to the cuticular conductance of different species. We used empirical and modeling evidence to show that plants with more permeable cuticles are more often classified as anisohydric; the σ values of those species were very well correlated with measured cuticular permeance. Furthermore, we found that midday leaf water potential in species with more permeable cuticles would continue to decrease as soils become drier, but not in those with less permeable cuticles. We devised a diagnostic parameter, Γ, to identify circumstances where the impact of cuticular conductance could cause species misclassification. The results suggest that cuticular conductance needs to be considered to better understand plant water-use strategies and to accurately predict forest responses to water stress under future climate scenarios.


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