Modelling non-steady-state isotope enrichment of leaf water in a gas-exchange cuvette environment.

Plant Cell Environ

Faculty of Agriculture and Environment, University of Sydney, Private Bag 4110, Narellan, New South Wales, 2567, Australia.

Published: December 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are increasingly interested in using gas-exchange systems and laser isotope measurement to study plant water dynamics under non-steady-state (NSS) conditions, which evaluate isotopic variations in leaf water and transpiration.
  • The existing Farquhar & Cernusak (F&C) NSS model, designed for open fields, does not work well in gas-exchange cuvettes due to its assumption of constant water vapor isotope composition, necessitating modifications for accurate application.
  • The new model introduces a 'net-flux' approach to leaf water turnover, aligning well with experimental data from cotton leaves and suggests that this revised model should be adopted for future cuvette-based isotope studies.

Article Abstract

The combined use of a gas-exchange system and laser-based isotope measurement is a tool of growing interest in plant ecophysiological studies, owing to its relevance for assessing isotopic variability in leaf water and/or transpiration under non-steady-state (NSS) conditions. However, the current Farquhar & Cernusak (F&C) NSS leaf water model, originally developed for open-field scenarios, is unsuited for use in a gas-exchange cuvette environment where isotope composition of water vapour (δv ) is intrinsically linked to that of transpiration (δE ). Here, we modified the F&C model to make it directly compatible with the δv -δE dynamic characteristic of a typical cuvette setting. The resultant new model suggests a role of 'net-flux' (rather than 'gross-flux' as suggested by the original F&C model)-based leaf water turnover rate in controlling the time constant (τ) for the approach to steady sate. The validity of the new model was subsequently confirmed in a cuvette experiment involving cotton leaves, for which we demonstrated close agreement between τ values predicted from the model and those measured from NSS variations in isotope enrichment of transpiration. Hence, we recommend that our new model be incorporated into future isotope studies involving a cuvette condition where the transpiration flux directly influences δv . There is an increasing popularity among plant ecophysiologists to use a gas-exchange system coupled to laser-based isotope measurement for investigating non-steady state (NSS) isotopic variability in leaf water (and/or transpiration); however, the current Farquhar & Cernusak (F&C) NSS leaf water model is unsuited for use in a gas-exchange cuvette environment due to its implicit assumption of isotope composition of water vapor (δv ) being constant and independent of that of transpiration (δE ). In the present study, we modified the F&C model to make it compatible with the dynamic relationship between δv and δE as is typically associated with a cuvette setting. Using an experiment conducted on cotton leaves, we show that the modified NSS model performed well in predicting the time constant for the exponential approach of leaf water toward steady state under cuvette conditions. Such a result demonstrates the applicability of this new model to gas-exchange cuvette conditions where the transpiration flux directly influences δv , and therefore suggests the need to incorporate this model into future isotope studies that employ a laser-cuvette coupled system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pce.12571DOI Listing

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