Comparative water relations of three successional hardwood species in central Wisconsin.

Tree Physiol

School of Forest Resources, Ferguson Building, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.

Published: September 1988

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined water relations of three understory tree species—Quercus ellipsoidalis (xeric), Populus tremuloides (mesic), and Acer rubrum (versatile)—during the 1986 growing season.
  • Understory conditions included high soil moisture, low sunlight, and low vapor pressure deficit, affecting stomatal conductance and transpiration rates, which were highest in P. tremuloides and Q. ellipsoidalis, while A. rubrum showed the lowest.
  • P. tremuloides consistently displayed lower leaf water potentials, highest elasticity, and a significant decrease in osmotic potential as water availability dropped, leading to the most pronounced decline in turgor pressure among the species.

Article Abstract

Water relations of co-occurring understory saplings of Quercus ellipsoidalis E.J. Hill, an early successional, xeric species, Populus tremuloides Michx., an early successional, mesic species, and Acer rubrum L., a late successional species that occurs on both wet and dry sites, were evaluated on four dates during the 1986 growing season. The understory was characterized by high soil water content, low irradiance and low vapor pressure deficit throughout the growing season. Stomatal conductance and calculated transpiration flux were lowest for A. rubrum and highest for P. tremuloides and Q. ellipsoidalis. Except early in the growing season, leaf water potentials were lower in P. tremuloides than in the other species. Populus tremuloides had the highest bulk modulus of elasticity, Q. ellipsoidalis the lowest. Over the growing season, Populus tremuloides and Q. ellipsoidalis, but not A. rubrum, exhibited a decrease in osmotic potential at both full and zero turgor. Of the three species, Populus tremuloides exhibited the sharpest decrease in leaf water potential and turgor pressure with decreasing relative water content.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/treephys/4.3.263DOI Listing

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