AI Article Synopsis

  • Mild water deficit and subsequent rewatering impact physiological, morphological, and chemical traits of juvenile Eucalyptus globulus and Eucalyptus viminalis, with both species showing similar responses to these conditions.
  • Key effects of water deficit included decreased leaf water potential, reduced biomass, and varying concentrations of certain compounds, while rewatering mainly altered carbon:nitrogen ratios and phenolic compounds.
  • Despite the observed changes due to water deficit and rewatering, the variations within species based on provenance were minor compared to the inherent differences in traits among the provenances, suggesting limited adaptive responses.

Article Abstract

Water deficit associated with drought can severely affect plants and influence ecological interactions involving plant secondary metabolites. We tested the effect of mild water deficit and rewatering on physiological, morphological and chemical traits of juvenile Eucalyptus globulus Labill. and Eucalyptus viminalis Labill. We also tested if responses of juvenile eucalypts to water deficit and rewatering varied within species using provenances across a rainfall gradient. Both species and all provenances were similarly affected by mild water deficit and rewatering, as only foliar abscisic acid levels differed among provenances during water deficit. Across species and provenances, water deficit decreased leaf water potential, above-ground biomass and formylated phloroglucinol compound concentrations, and increased condensed tannin concentrations. Rewatering reduced leaf carbon : nitrogen, and total phenolic and chlorogenic acid concentrations. Water deficit and rewatering had no effect on total oil or individual terpene concentrations. Levels of trait plasticity due to water deficit and rewatering were less than levels of constitutive trait variation among provenances. The overall uniformity of responses to the treatments regardless of native provenance indicates limited diversification of plastic responses when compared with the larger quantitative variation of constitutive traits within these species. These responses to mild water deficit may differ from responses to more extreme water deficit or to responses of juvenile/mature eucalypts growing at each locality.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/treephys/tpv106DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

water deficit
44
deficit rewatering
24
mild water
16
water
12
species provenances
12
deficit
11
responses mild
8
secondary metabolites
8
provenances water
8
responses
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!