Consistent leaf respiratory response to experimental warming of three North American deciduous trees : a comparison across seasons, years, habitats and sites

Xiaorong Wei, Kerrie M. Sendall, Artur Stefanski, Changming Zhao, Jihua Hou, Roy L. Rich, Rebecca A. Montgomery, Peter B. Reich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Most vascular plants acclimate respiration to changes in ambient temperature, but explicit tests of these responses in field settings are rare, and how acclimation responses vary in space and time is relatively unstudied, hindering our ability to predict respiratory release of carbon under future climatic conditions. We measured temperature response curves of leaf respiration for three deciduous tree species from 2009 to 2012 in a field warming experiment (+3.4 °C above ambient) in both open and understory conditions at two sites in the southern boreal forest in Minnesota, USA. We analyzed the effects of warming on leaf respiration, and how the effects varied among species, times of season (early, middle and late parts of the growing season), sites, habitats (understory, open) and years. We hypothesized that the respiration exponent (Q10) of the short-term temperature response curve and the degree of acclimation would be smaller under conditions where plants were more likely to be substrate limited, such as in the understory or the margins of the growing season. However, in contrast to these predictions, stable Q10 and strong respiratory acclimation were consistently observed. For each species, the Q10 did not vary with experimental warming, nor was its response to warming influenced by time of season, year, site or habitat. Strong leaf respiratory acclimation to warming occurred in each species and was consistent across most sources of variation. Most of the leaf traits studied were not affected by warming, while the Q10–leaf nitrogen and R25–soluble carbohydrate relationships were observed, and shifted with warming, implying that acclimation may be associated with the adjustment in respiratory capacity and its relation to leaf nitrogen and soluble carbohydrate content. Consistent Q10 and acclimation across habitats, sites, times of season and years suggest that modeling of temperature acclimation may be possible with relatively simple functions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)285-300
Number of pages16
JournalTree Physiology
Volume37
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • acclimatization
  • high temperatures
  • leaf respiration
  • plants

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