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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Resource partitioning ; Soil water uptake ; Stable isotopes ; Species diversity ; Tropical dry forests
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Lowland dry forests are unique in Hawaii for their high diversity of tree species compared with wet forests. We characterized spatial and temporal partitioning of soil water resources among seven indigenous and one invasive dry forest species to determine whether the degree of partitioning was consistent with the relatively high species richness in these forests. Patterns of water utilization were inferred from stable hydrogen isotope ratios (δD) of soil and xylem water, zones of soil water depletion, plant water status, leaf phenology, and spatial patterns of species distribution. Soil water δD values ranged from –20‰ near the surface to –48‰ at 130 cm depth. Metrosideros polymorpha, an evergreen species, and Reynoldsia sandwicensis, a drought-deciduous species, had xylem sap δD values of about –52‰, and appeared to obtain their water largely from deeper soil layers. The remaining six species had xylem δD values ranging from –33 to –42‰, and apparently obtained water from shallower soil layers. Xylem water δD values were negatively correlated with minimum annual leaf water potential and positively correlated with leaf solute content, an integrated measure of leaf water deficit. Seasonal patterns of leaf production ranged from dry season deciduous at one extreme to evergreen with near constant leaf expansion rates at the other. Species tapping water more actively from deeper soil layers tended to exhibit larger seasonality of leaf production than species relying on shallower soil water sources. Individuals of Myoporum sandwicense were more spatially isolated than would be expected by chance. Even though this species apparently extracted water primarily from shallow soil layers, as indicated by its xylem δD values, its nearly constant growth rates across all seasons may have been the result of a larger volume of soil water available per individual. The two dominant species, Diospyros sandwicensis and Nestegis sandwicensis, exhibited low leaf water potentials during the dry season and apparently drew water mostly from the upper portion of the soil profile, which may have allowed them to exploit light precipitation events more effectively than the more deeply rooted species. Character displacement in spatial and temporal patterns of soil water uptake was consistent with the relatively high diversity of woody species in Hawaiian dry forests.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Stem ; Photosynthesis ; Desert ; Plant stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Stem photosynthetic responses to environmental parameters were investigated with Psorothamnus spinosus in the Sonoran Desert of California. Light saturation of stem photosynthesis was equal to maximum midday summer irradance (1600–2000 μmol·m-2·s-1). The optimum temperature for stem photosynthesis was 39°C, and lower stem temperatures (27–35°C) caused significant decreases (up to 50%) in stem photosynthesis. Positive stem photosynthesis was maintained up to 51°C. Stem photosynthesis was relatively insensitive to increasing vpd up to 5 kPa; However, stem conductance decreased by 25% at a vpd of 5 kPa. At vpd greater than 5 kPa stem photosynthesis decreased relatively more than that of stem conductance causing a decrease in water use efficiency and an increase an intercellular carbon dioxide concentration. Maximum stem photosynthetic rates were low (6.2–10.6 μmol·m-2·s-1) on a stem surface area, but, stem photosynthetic rates of young shoots were substantially higher (19.5–33.3 μmol· m-2·s-1) on a projected area basis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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