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Forests are essential sources of tangible and intangible benefits, but global climate change associated with recurrent extreme drought episodes severely affects forest productivity due to extensive tree die-back. On that, it appeals to an urgency for large-scale reforestation efforts to mitigate the impact of climate change worldwide; however, there is a lack of understanding of drought-effect on sapling growth and survival mechanisms. It is also challenging to anticipate how long trees can survive and when they succumb to drought. Hence, to ensure success of reforestation programs and sustainable forest productivity, it is essential to identify drought-resistant saplings. For that, profound knowledge of hydraulic characteristics is needed. To achieve this, the study was split into two phases which seek to address (1) how the hydraulic and anatomical traits influence the sapling’s growth rate under drought stress. (2) how plant water potential regulation and physiological traits are linked to species’ water use strategies and their drought tolerance.
The dissertation is assembled of two study campaigns carried out on saplings at the Chair of Botany II, University of Würzburg, Germany. The first study involved three ecologically important temperate broadleaved tree species — saplings of 18-month (Acer pseudoplatanus, Betula pendula, and Sorbus aucuparia) — grown from seeds in contrasting conditions (inside a greenhouse and outside), with the latter being subjected to severe natural heat waves. In the second study, two additional temperate species (Fagus sylvatica and Tilia cordata) were added. The drying-out event was conducted using a randomised blocked design by monitoring plant water status in a climate-controlled chamber and a greenhouse.
In campaign I, I present the result based on analysed data of 82 plants of temperate deciduous species and address the juvenile growth rate trade-off with xylem safety-efficiency. Our results indicate biomass production varies considerably due to the contrasted growing environment. High hydraulic efficiency is necessary for increased biomass production, while safety-efficiency traits are decoupled and species-specific. Furthermore, productivity was linked considerably to xylem safety without revealing a well-defined pattern among species. Moreover, plasticity in traits differed between stressed and non-stressed plants. For example, safety-related characteristics were more static than efficiency-related traits, which had higher intra-specific variation. Moreover, we recorded anatomical and leaf traits adjustments in response to a stress condition, but consistency among species is lacking.
In campaign II, I combined different ways to estimate the degree of isohydry based on water potential regulation and connected the iso-anisohydric spectrum (i.e., hydroscape area, HSA) to hydraulic traits to elucidate actual plant performance during drought. We analysed plant water potential regulation (Ψpd and Ψmd) and stomatal conductance of 28-29 month saplings of five species. I used a linear mixed modelling approach that allowed to control individual variations to describe the water potential regulation and tested different conceptual definitions of isohydricity. The combined methods allowed us to estimate species' relative degree of isohydry. Further, we examined the traits coordination, including hydraulic safety margin, HSM; embolism resistance, P88; turgor loss, Ψtlp; stomata closure, Ps90; capacitance, C; cuticular conductance, gmin, to determine time to hydraulic failure (Thf). Thf is the cumulative effect of time to stomata closure (Tsc) and time after stomatal closure to catastrophic hydraulic failure (Tcrit).
Our results show the species' HSA matches their stomatal stringency, which confirms the relationship between stomatal response and leaf water potential decline. Species that close stomata at lower water potential notably had a larger HSA. Isohydric behaviour was mostly associated with leaf hydraulic traits and poorly to xylem safety traits. Species' degree of isohydry was also unrelated to the species' time to death during drying-out experiments. This supports the notion that isohydry behaviours are linked to water use rather than drought survival strategies. Further, consistent with our assumptions, more isohydric species had larger internal water storage and lost their leaf turgor at less negative water potentials. Counter to our expectations, neither embolism resistance nor the associated hydraulic safety margins were related to metrics of isohydry. Instead, our results indicate traits associated with plant drought response to cluster along two largely independent axes of variation (i.e., stomatal stringency and xylem safety). Furthermore, on the temporal progression of plant drought responses, stomatal closure is critical in coordinating various traits to determine species' hydraulic strategies. Desiccation avoidance strategy was linked to Tsc and coordinated traits response of Ps90, Ψtlp, and HSA, whereas desiccation tolerance was related to Tcrit and traits such as lower P88 value, high HSM, and lower gmin. Notably, the shoot capacitance (C) is crucial in Thf and exhibits dichotomous behaviour linked to both Tsc and Tcrit.
In conclusion, knowledge of growth rate trade-offs with xylem safety-efficiency combined with traits linked to species’ hydraulic strategies along the isohydry could substantially enhance our ability to identify drought-resistant saplings to ensure the success of reforestation programs and predicting sensitivity to drought for achieving sustainable forest ecosystems.
The evolution of the internal water transport system was a prerequisite for high plant productivity. In times of climate change, understanding the dependency of juvenile growth on xylem hydraulic physiology is therefore of high importance. Here, we explored various wood anatomical, hydraulic, and leaf morphological traits related to hydraulic safety and efficiency in three temperate broadleaved tree species (Acer pseudoplatanus, Betula pendula, and Sorbus aucuparia). We took advantage of a severe natural heat wave that resulted in different climatic growing conditions for even-aged plants from the same seed source growing inside a greenhouse and outside. Inside the greenhouse, the daily maximum vapour pressure deficit was on average 36% higher than outside during the growing seasons. Because of the higher atmospheric moisture stress, the biomass production differed up to 5.6-fold between both groups. Except for one species, a high productivity was associated with a high hydraulic efficiency caused by large xylem vessels and a large, supported leaf area. Although no safety-efficiency trade-off was observed, productivity was significantly related to P\(_{50}\) in two of the tree species but without revealing any clear pattern. A considerable plasticity in given traits was observed between both groups, with safety-related traits being more static while efficiency-related traits revealed a higher intra-specific plasticity. This was associated with other wood anatomical and leaf morphological adjustments. We confirm that a high hydraulic efficiency seems to be a prerequisite for a high biomass production, while our controversial results on the growth–xylem safety relationship confirm that safety-efficiency traits are decoupled and that their relationship with juvenile growth and water regime is species-specific.
Climate change can alter the phenology of organisms. It may thus lead seasonal organisms to face different day lengths than in the past, and the fitness consequences of these changes are as yet unclear. To study such effects, we used the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum as a model organism, as it has obligately asexual clones which can be used to study day length effects without eliciting a seasonal response. We recorded life-history traits under short and long days, both with two realistic temperature cycles with means differing by 2 °C. In addition, we measured the population growth of aphids on their host plant Pisum sativum. We show that short days reduce fecundity and the length of the reproductive period of aphids. Nevertheless, this does not translate into differences at the population level because the observed fitness costs only become apparent late in the individual's life. As expected, warm temperature shortens the development time by 0.7 days/°C, leading to faster generation times. We found no interaction of temperature and day length. We conclude that day length changes cause only relatively mild costs, which may not decelerate the increase in pest status due to climate change.
In order to understand adaptation processes and population dynamics, it is central to know how environmental parameters influence performance of organisms within populations, including their phenotypes. The impact of single or few particular parameters in concert was often assessed in laboratory and mesocosm experiments. However, under natural conditions, with many biotic and abiotic factors potentially interacting, outcomes on phenotypic changes may be different. To study the potential environmental impact on realized phenotypic plasticity within a natural population, we assessed metamorphic traits (developmental time, size and body mass) in an amphibian species, the European common frog Rana temporaria, since a) larval amphibians are known to exhibit high levels of phenotypic plasticity of these traits in response to habitat parameters and, b) the traits' features may strongly influence individuals' future performance and fitness. In 2007 we studied these metamorphic traits in 18 ponds spread over an area of 28 km 2. A subset of six ponds was reinvestigated in 2009 and 2010. This study revealed locally high variances in metamorphic traits in this presumed generalist species. We detected profound differences between metamorphing froglets (up to factor ten); both between and within ponds, on a very small geographic scale. Parameters such as predation and competition as well as many other pond characteristics, generally expected to have high impact on development, could not be related to the trait differences. We observed high divergence of patterns of mass at metamorphosis between ponds, but no detectable pattern when metamorphic traits were compared between ponds and years. Our results indicate that environment alone, i.e. as experienced by tadpoles sharing the same breeding pond, can only partly explain the variability of metamorphic traits observed. This emphasizes the importance to assess variability of reaction norms on the individual level to explain within-population variability.
Die Gelbbauchunke Bombina variegata gilt als eine typische Pionierart, die bevorzugt vegetationslose, ephemere Gewässer mit hohem Austrocknungsrisiko als Laichgewässer nutzt. Kleinstgewässer dieser Art zeichnen sich durch hohe Fluktuationen abiotischer (Temperatur, Ionenkonzentration, Wasserstand), aber auch biotischer Faktoren (Dichte, Räuberdruck) aus. In Anpassung an das zeitlich und räumlich unvorhersehbare Auftreten dieser Gewässer hat die Gelbbauchunke eine für eine temperate Art außergewöhnlich lange Fortpflanzungsperiode (April - August). Die Weibchen zeigten während der Saison eine kontinuierliche Eientwicklung, die es ihnen erlaubt, opportunistisch mehrfach abzulaichen und damit eine zeitliche Risikostreuung der Gelege zu betreiben. Darüber hinaus nutzt Bombina variegata alle Möglichkeiten der räumlichen Risikostreuung, indem sie ihre Gelege in kleinen Portionen innerhalb von Pfützen, aber auch auf verschiedene Pfützen verteilt. Die hohe Variabilität in den produzierten Eigrößen, besonders zwischen den Gelegen verschiedener Weibchen, ließ auf den ersten Blick eine weitere Strategie zur Risikostreuung vermuten; allerdings war die Eigröße von der Kondition der Weibchen abhängig: während gut konditionierte Weibchen in der Lage waren, sowohl größere Eier als auch größere Gelege zu produzieren, gingen schlechter konditionierte Weibchen einen „trade-off“ zugunsten einer möglichst hohen Fekundität ein. Unter günstigen Bedingungen greift diese Strategie, während die Produktion überdurchschnittlich großer Eier unter Austrocknungsbedingungen von Vorteil ist: Kaulquappen großer Eier hatten eine entsprechend größere Schlupfgröße und zeigten gegenüber Quappen kleinerer Eier eine beschleunigte Entwicklung. Auch bei den Labor- und Freilanduntersuchungen, die sich mit der Frage be-schäftigten, wie Bombina variegata auf kritische Veränderungen des Wasservo-lumens reagiert, war eine enorme Variabilität in den Wachstums- und Entwicklungsverläufen der Kaulquappen der verschiedenen Ansätze zu beobachten, die sich nur bedingt auf abweichende Versuchsbedingungen zurückführen ließ; vielmehr dürfte die qualitative Ausstattung der Quappen eine wesentliche Rolle gespielt haben. Dabei kristallisierten sich in den verschiedenen Versuchen zwei unterschiedliche Entwicklungsstrategien heraus: Kaulquappen, die eine insgesamt relativ lange Entwicklungszeit benötigten, zeigten eine hohe phänotypische Plastizität und reagierten adaptiv auf abnehmende Wasserstände, indem sie ihre Entwicklung auf Kosten ihres Wachstums beschleunigten. Bei Quappen, die im Durchschnitt eine wesentlich schnellere Entwicklungszeit besaßen, war diese per se günstige hohe Entwicklungsrate dagegen fixiert, unabhängig davon, während welcher Entwicklungsphase die Quappen auf veränderte Bedingungen umgestellt wurden. Unter verschlechterten Bedingungen zeigten sie lediglich Wachstumseinbußen. Ähnlich reagierten Kaulquappen auf zunehmende Ionenkonzentrationen bzw. sinkende Wasserstände. Dagegen wirkte sich Ammoniak, Exkretionsprodukt von Amphibienlarven, in erhöhten Konzentrationen stark negativ aus und beeinträchtigte sowohl das Wachstum als auch die Entwicklung der Quappen. Auf Räuber, die im Vergleich zum Austrocknungsrisiko temporärer Gewässer eine eher untergeordnete Rolle spielen, reagierten Bombina variegata-Quappen nur bedingt. Erst nach Fütterung der Libellenlarven mit Unkenquappen schränkten sie vorübergehend ihre Aktivität ein und mieden den räubernahen Bereich, ohne dass dadurch die Entwicklungsgeschwindigkeit oder das Wachstum der Quappen beeinträchtigt wurde; allerdings war eine erhöhte Mortalität zu beobachten.