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Stomatal density and aperture in non-vascular land plants are non-responsive to above-ambient atmospheric CO2 concentrations
Authors:Katie J Field  Jeffrey G Duckett  Duncan D Cameron  Silvia Pressel
Institution:1.Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK and 2.Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Abstract:Background and Aims Following the consensus view for unitary origin and conserved function of stomata across over 400 million years of land plant evolution, stomatal abundance has been widely used to reconstruct palaeo-atmospheric environments. However, the responsiveness of stomata in mosses and hornworts, the most basal stomate lineages of extant land plants, has received relatively little attention. This study aimed to redress this imbalance and provide the first direct evidence of bryophyte stomatal responsiveness to atmospheric CO2.Methods A selection of hornwort (Anthoceros punctatus, Phaeoceros laevis) and moss (Polytrichum juniperinum, Mnium hornum, Funaria hygrometrica) sporophytes with contrasting stomatal morphologies were grown under different atmospheric CO2 concentrations (CO2]) representing both modern (440 p.p.m. CO2) and ancient (1500 p.p.m. CO2) atmospheres. Upon sporophyte maturation, stomata from each bryophyte species were imaged, measured and quantified.Key Results Densities and dimensions were unaffected by changes in CO2], other than a slight increase in stomatal density in Funaria and abnormalities in Polytrichum stomata under elevated CO2].Conclusions The changes to stomata in Funaria and Polytrichum are attributed to differential growth of the sporophytes rather than stomata-specific responses. The absence of responses to changes in CO2] in bryophytes is in line with findings previously reported in other early lineages of vascular plants. These findings strengthen the hypothesis of an incremental acquisition of stomatal regulatory processes through land plant evolution and urge considerable caution in using stomatal densities as proxies for paleo-atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
Keywords:Atmospheric CO2  bryophytes  carbon dioxide  evolution  hornworts  mosses  palaeo-atmospheric environment  stomatal density  Anthoceros punctatus  Phaeoceros laevis  Polytrichum juniperinum  Mnium hornum  Funaria hygrometrica
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