Photosynthetic efficiency is a critical determinant of crop yield potential, although it remains below the theoretical optimum in modern crop varieties. Enhancing mesophyll conductance (i.e. the rate of carbon dioxide diffusion from substomatal cavities to the sites of carboxylation) may increase photosynthetic and water use efficiencies. To improve water use efficiency, mesophyll conductance should be increased without concomitantly increasing stomatal conductance. Here, we partition the variance in mesophyll conductance to within-and among-cultivar components across soybean (Glycine max) grown under both controlled and field conditions and examine the covariation of mesophyll conductance with photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, water use efficiency, and leaf mass per area. We demonstrate that mesophyll conductance varies more than 2-fold and that 38% of this variation is due to cultivar identity. As expected, mesophyll conductance is positively correlated with photosynthetic rates. However, a strong positive correlation between mesophyll and stomatal conductance among cultivars apparently impedes positive scaling between mesophyll conductance and water use efficiency in soybean. Contrary to expectations, photosynthetic rates and mesophyll conductance both increased with increasing leaf mass per area. The presence of genetic variation for mesophyll conductance suggests that there is potential to increase photosynthesis and mesophyll conductance by selecting for greater leaf mass per area. Increasing water use efficiency, though, is unlikely unless there is simultaneous stabilizing selection on stomatal conductance.
Photosynthesis and photorespiration covary, but this relationship is not fully understood. Natural variation among Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes offers an ideal system for interrogating the physiological co-ordination of photosynthesis and photorespiration.
We investigated the effects of historic soil chemistry changes associated with acid rain, i.e., reduced soil pH and a shift from nitrogen (N)- to phosphorus (P)-limitation, on the coordination of leaf water demand and xylem hydraulic supply traits in two co-occurring temperate tree species differing in growth rate. Using a full-factorial design (N × P × pH), we measured leaf nutrient content, water relations, leaf-level and canopy-level gas exchange, total biomass and allocation, as well as stem xylem anatomy and hydraulic function for greenhouse-grown saplings of fast-growing Acer rubrum (L.) and slow-growing Quercus alba (L.). We used principle component analysis to characterize trait coordination. We found that N-limitation, but not P-limitation, had a significant impact on plant water relations and hydraulic coordination of both species. Fast-growing A. rubrum made hydraulic adjustments in response to N-limitation, but trait coordination was variable within treatments and did not fully compensate for changing allocation across N-availability. For slow-growing Q. alba, N-limitation engendered more strict coordination of leaf and xylem traits, resulting in similar leaf water content and hydraulic function across all treatments. Finally, low pH reduced the propensity of both species to adjust leaf water relations and xylem anatomical traits in response to nutrient manipulations. Our data suggest that a shift from N- to P-limitation has had a negative impact on the water relations and hydraulic function of A. rubrum to a greater extent than for Q. alba We suggest that current expansion of A. rubrum populations could be tempered by acidic N-deposition, which may restrict it to more mesic microsites. The disruption of hydraulic acclimation and coordination at low pH is emphasized as an interesting area of future study.
Population‐level adaptation to broad‐scale regional climates or within‐population variation in genome size of the genetically and phenotypically diverse C4 grass, Panicum virgatum (switchgrass), may influence the responses of this species to future precipitation variability associated with climate change. Therefore, we investigated P. virgatum responses to water variability between natural populations collected across a latitudinal gradient and among individuals spanning a range of genomes sizes within these populations. P. virgatum plants from natural populations originating from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas, U.S.A, received frequent, small precipitation events (“ambient”) or infrequent, large precipitation events (“altered”) to simulate contrasting rainfall variability expected for this region. We measured leaf‐level physiology, aboveground biomass and genome size for each individual. Gas exchange rates and aboveground biomass varied significantly by population origin but did not differ by genome size. Altered precipitation treatments reduced leaf‐level physiological rates; however this result did not vary by population or genome size. Our results suggest that trait variation in P. virgatum is primarily attributed to population‐level adaptation across a latitudinal gradient, not genome size, and that neither population‐level adaptation nor genome size may be important predictors of P. virgatum responses to future climatic conditions.
The recent study by McGrath and Lobell (2013 Environ. Res. Lett. 8 014054) assesses the interaction of a changing climate and the carbon dioxide fertilization effect (CFE) on crop productivity. By accounting for the differential response of individual crops and using a finer geographic scale to assess climate effects on crops they have found that previous estimates of the CFE have likely overestimated future yields in some regions while underestimating yields in others. While this work improves our estimates of potential crop yields in an elevated CO 2 atmosphere, it also highlights knowledge gaps regarding the response of major crops to the effects of elevated CO 2 under the sub-optimal growing conditions predicted for many regions in the future.
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