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Higher thermal acclimation potential of respiration but not photosynthesis in two alpine Picea taxa in contrast to two lowland congeners. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Members of the Picea genus are significant for CO2 absorption in alpine and boreal forests, but their growth response to high temperatures is under-researched.
  • Experimenting with four-year-old seedlings from two alpine and two lowland Picea taxa at varying temperatures revealed that high heat stress reduced biomass growth and photosynthesis across all taxa, with alpine species being more negatively impacted.
  • The study highlights that lowland taxa maintain better photosynthetic stability and lower respiratory acclimation compared to alpine taxa, suggesting altitude adaptation should be considered for future carbon flux predictions in warming climates.

Article Abstract

The members of the genus Picea form a dominant component in many alpine and boreal forests which are the major sink for atmospheric CO2. However, little is known about the growth response and acclimation of CO2 exchange characteristics to high temperature stress in Picea taxa from different altitudes. Gas exchange parameters and growth characteristics were recorded from four year old seedlings of two alpine (Picea likiangensis vars. rubescens and linzhiensis) and two lowland (P. koraiensis and P. meyeri) taxa. Seedlings were grown at moderate (25°C/15°C) and high (35°C/25°C) day/night temperatures, for four months. The approximated biomass increment (ΔD2H) for all taxa decreased under high temperature stress, associated with decreased photosynthesis and increased respiration. However, the two alpine taxa exhibited lower photosynthetic acclimation and higher respiratory acclimation than either lowland taxon. Moreover, higher leaf dry mass per unit area (LMA) and leaf nitrogen content per unit area (Narea), and a smaller change in the nitrogen use efficiency of photosynthesis (PNUE) for lowland taxa indicated that these maintained higher homeostasis of photosynthesis than alpine taxa. The higher respiration rates produced more energy for repair and maintenance biomass, especially for higher photosynthetic activity for lowland taxa, which causes lower respiratory acclimation. Thus, the changes of ΔD2H for alpine spruces were larger than that for lowland spruces. These results indicate that long term heat stress negatively impact on the growth of Picea seedlings, and alpine taxa are more affected than low altitude ones by high temperature stress. Hence the altitude ranges of Picea taxa should be taken into account when predicting changes to carbon fluxes in warmer conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4395334PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0123248PLOS

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