TY - JOUR
T1 - A meta-analysis of responses of C3 plants to atmospheric CO2
T2 - dose-response curves for 85 traits ranging from the molecular to the whole-plant level
AU - Poorter, Hendrik
AU - Knopf, Oliver
AU - Wright, Ian J.
AU - Temme, Andries A.
AU - Hogewoning, Sander W.
AU - Graf, Alexander
AU - Cernusak, Lucas A.
AU - Pons, Thijs L.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Generalised dose-response curves are essential to understand how plants acclimate to atmospheric CO2. We carried out a meta-analysis of 630 experiments in which C-3 plants were experimentally grown at different [CO2] under relatively benign conditions, and derived dose-response curves for 85 phenotypic traits. These curves were characterised by form, plasticity, consistency and reliability. Considered over a range of 200-1200 mu mol mol(-1) CO2, some traits more than doubled (e.g. area-based photosynthesis; intrinsic water-use efficiency), whereas others more than halved (area-based transpiration). At current atmospheric [CO2], 64% of the total stimulation in biomass over the 200-1200 mu mol mol(-1) range has already been realised. We also mapped the trait responses of plants to [CO2] against those we have quantified before for light intensity. For most traits, CO2 and light responses were of similar direction. However, some traits (such as reproductive effort) only responded to light, others (such as plant height) only to [CO2], and some traits (such as area-based transpiration) responded in opposite directions. This synthesis provides a comprehensive picture of plant responses to [CO2] at different integration levels and offers the quantitative dose-response curves that can be used to improve global change simulation models.
AB - Generalised dose-response curves are essential to understand how plants acclimate to atmospheric CO2. We carried out a meta-analysis of 630 experiments in which C-3 plants were experimentally grown at different [CO2] under relatively benign conditions, and derived dose-response curves for 85 phenotypic traits. These curves were characterised by form, plasticity, consistency and reliability. Considered over a range of 200-1200 mu mol mol(-1) CO2, some traits more than doubled (e.g. area-based photosynthesis; intrinsic water-use efficiency), whereas others more than halved (area-based transpiration). At current atmospheric [CO2], 64% of the total stimulation in biomass over the 200-1200 mu mol mol(-1) range has already been realised. We also mapped the trait responses of plants to [CO2] against those we have quantified before for light intensity. For most traits, CO2 and light responses were of similar direction. However, some traits (such as reproductive effort) only responded to light, others (such as plant height) only to [CO2], and some traits (such as area-based transpiration) responded in opposite directions. This synthesis provides a comprehensive picture of plant responses to [CO2] at different integration levels and offers the quantitative dose-response curves that can be used to improve global change simulation models.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:68699
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85119893190&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nph.17802
DO - 10.1111/nph.17802
M3 - Article
C2 - 34657301
SN - 1469-8137
VL - 233
SP - 1560
EP - 1596
JO - New Phytologist
JF - New Phytologist
IS - 4
ER -