Physiological and isotopic (δ13C and δ18O) responses of three tropical tree species to water and nutrient availability |
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Authors: | LUCAS A. CERNUSAK,KLAUS WINTER,& BENJAMIN L. TURNER |
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Affiliation: | Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, P.O. Box 0843-03092, Balboa, Ancon, Republic of Panama |
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Abstract: | Water-use efficiency and stable isotope composition were studied in three tropical tree species. Seedlings of Tectona grandis , Swietenia macrophylla and Platymiscium pinnatum were grown at either high or low water supply, and with or without added fertilizer. These three species previously exhibited low, intermediate and high whole-plant water-use efficiency ( TE ) when grown at high water supply in unfertilized soil. Responses of TE to water and nutrient availability varied among species. The TE was calculated as experiment-long dry matter production divided by cumulative water use. Species-specific offsets were observed in relationships between TE and whole-plant 13C discrimination (Δ13Cp). These offsets could be attributed to a breakdown in the relationship between Δ13Cp and the ratio of intercellular to ambient CO2 partial pressures ( c i/ c a) in P. pinnatum , and to variation among species in the leaf-to-air vapour pressure difference ( v ). Thus, a plot of v · TE against c i/ c a showed a general relationship among species. Relationships between δ 18O of stem dry matter and stomatal conductance ranged from strongly negative for S. macrophylla to no relationship for T. grandis . Results suggest inter-specific variation among tropical tree species in relationships between stable isotope ratios ( δ 13C and δ 18O) and the gas exchange processes thought to affect them. |
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Keywords: | carbon isotope ratio leaf N concentration oxygen isotope ratio transpiration tropical tree water-use efficiency |
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