Schönbeck, Leonie
- Institutionen för sydsvensk skogsvetenskap, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
- University of California, Riverside (UCR)
Forskningsartikel2025Vetenskapligt granskadÖppen tillgång
Schonbeck, Leonie C.; Rasmussen, Carolyn; Santiago, Louis S.
The water potential at which leaf cells lose turgor (Psi(TLP)) is a useful predictor of whole-plant drought tolerance and biome wetness. However, many plants can achieve water potential values below Psi(TLP) and recover, raising questions about the physiological processes that occur below Psi(TLP). We established a controlled greenhouse experiment to induce turgor loss on six shrub species from a Mediterranean-type ecosystem in Southern California and characterised physiological and leaf-structural adjustments to Psi(TLP). We documented seasonal adjustments in Psi(TLP), both with and without applied drought. Stomatal closure always occurred below Psi(TLP), and the margin between the two phenomena increased with lower Psi(TLP). Drought tolerance was strongly correlated with heat tolerance. Most histological responses to Psi(TLP) involved shrinkage of both spongy mesophyll cells and intercellular air spaces, leading to reduced leaf thickness, but not plasmolysis. Overall, our results indicate a propensity to reach Psi values far below Psi(TLP) and maintain function for extended periods of time in Southern California shrubs. Whereas species in many ecosystems fall below Psi(TLP) for brief periods of time, the erratic nature of precipitation patterns makes Southern California an outlier in the range of operational plant water potentials.
chaparral; drought; heat; histology; thermal tolerance; turgor loss point
Plant, Cell and Environment
2025
Utgivare: WILEY
Botanik
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/141513