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Liang et al. (2018): Leaf anatomical traits determine the 18O enrichment of leaf water in coastal halophytes

Release time:2022-04-25 Hits:

DOI number:10.1111/pce.13398
Journal:Plant, Cell and Environment
Abstract:Anatomical adaptations to high-salinity environments in mangrove leaves may be recorded in leaf water isotopes. Recent studies observed lower 18O enrichment (ΔL) of leaf water with respect to source water in three mangrove species relative to adjacent freshwater trees, but the factors that govern this phenomenon remain unclear. To resolve this issue, we investigated leaf traits and ΔL in 15 species of true mangrove plants, 14 species of adjacent freshwater trees, and 4 species of semi-mangrove plants at five study sites along south-eastern coast of China. Our results confirm that ΔL was generally 3–4‰ lower for mangrove species than for adjacent freshwater or semi-mangrove species. We hypothesized that higher leaf water content (LWC) and lower leaf stomatal density (LS) both played important roles in reducing ΔL in mangroves relative to nearby freshwater plants. Both differences acted to elongate effective leaf mixing length (L) in mangroves by about 200% and lower stomatal conductance by about 30%. Péclet models based on both LWC and LS could accurately predict ΔL. Our findings highlight the potential species-specific anatomical determinants of ΔL (or L), which has important implications for the interpretation of environmental information from metabolites produced by leaf water isotopes in palaeoclimate research.
Note:Liang, J., J. S. Wright, X. Cui, W. Gan, L. Sternberg and G. Lin
Indexed by:Journal paper
Discipline:Natural Science
First-Level Discipline:Ecology
Volume:41
Issue:12
Page Number:2744-2757
Translation or Not:no
Included Journals:SCI
Links to published journals:https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.13398