Daytime depression in temperature-normalised stem CO 2 efflux in young poplar trees is dominated by low turgor pressure rather than by internal transport of respired CO 2
Daytime decreases in temperature-normalised stem CO efflux (E ) are commonly ascribed to internal transport of respired CO (F ) or to an attenuated respiratory activity due to lowered turgor pressure. The two are difficult to separate as they are simultaneously driven by sap flow dynamics. To achiev...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The New phytologist 2018-01, Vol.217 (2), p.586-598 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Daytime decreases in temperature-normalised stem CO
efflux (E
) are commonly ascribed to internal transport of respired CO
(F
) or to an attenuated respiratory activity due to lowered turgor pressure. The two are difficult to separate as they are simultaneously driven by sap flow dynamics. To achieve combined gradients in turgor pressure and F
, sap flow rates in poplar trees were manipulated through severe defoliation, severe drought, moderate defoliation and moderate drought. Turgor pressure was mechanistically modelled using measurements of sap flow, stem diameter variation, and soil and stem water potential. A mass balance approach considering internal and external CO
fluxes was applied to estimate F
. Under well-watered control conditions, both turgor pressure and sap flow, as a proxy of F
, were reliable predictors of E
. After tree manipulation, only turgor pressure was a robust predictor of E
. Moreover, F
accounted for |
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ISSN: | 0028-646X 1469-8137 |
DOI: | 10.1111/nph.14831 |