TY - JOUR
T1 - Tree drought physiology
T2 - critical research questions and strategies for mitigating climate change effects on forests
AU - Groover, Andrew
AU - Holbrook, N. Michele
AU - Polle, Andrea
AU - Sala, Anna
AU - Medlyn, Belinda
AU - Brodersen, Craig
AU - Pittermann, Jarmila
AU - Gersony, Jessica
AU - Sokołowska, Katarzyna
AU - Bogar, Laura
AU - McDowell, Nate
AU - Spicer, Rachel
AU - David-Schwartz, Rakefet
AU - Keller, Stephen
AU - Tschaplinski, Timothy J.
AU - Preisler, Yakir
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Droughts of increasing severity and frequency are a primary cause of forest mortality associated with climate change. Yet, fundamental knowledge gaps regarding the complex physiology of trees limit the development of more effective management strategies to mitigate drought effects on forests. Here, we highlight some of the basic research needed to better understand tree drought physiology and how new technologies and interdisciplinary approaches can be used to address them. Our discussion focuses on how trees change wood development to mitigate water stress, hormonal responses to drought, genetic variation underlying adaptive drought phenotypes, how trees ‘remember’ prior stress exposure, and how symbiotic soil microbes affect drought response. Next, we identify opportunities for using research findings to enhance or develop new strategies for managing drought effects on forests, ranging from matching genotypes to environments, to enhancing seedling resilience through nursery treatments, to landscape-scale monitoring and predictions. We conclude with a discussion of the need for co-producing research with land managers and extending research to forests in critical ecological regions beyond the temperate zone.
AB - Droughts of increasing severity and frequency are a primary cause of forest mortality associated with climate change. Yet, fundamental knowledge gaps regarding the complex physiology of trees limit the development of more effective management strategies to mitigate drought effects on forests. Here, we highlight some of the basic research needed to better understand tree drought physiology and how new technologies and interdisciplinary approaches can be used to address them. Our discussion focuses on how trees change wood development to mitigate water stress, hormonal responses to drought, genetic variation underlying adaptive drought phenotypes, how trees ‘remember’ prior stress exposure, and how symbiotic soil microbes affect drought response. Next, we identify opportunities for using research findings to enhance or develop new strategies for managing drought effects on forests, ranging from matching genotypes to environments, to enhancing seedling resilience through nursery treatments, to landscape-scale monitoring and predictions. We conclude with a discussion of the need for co-producing research with land managers and extending research to forests in critical ecological regions beyond the temperate zone.
KW - climate change
KW - drought
KW - forest management
KW - forests
KW - physiology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212305363&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nph.20326
DO - 10.1111/nph.20326
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212305363
SN - 0028-646X
VL - 245
SP - 1817
EP - 1832
JO - New Phytologist
JF - New Phytologist
IS - 5
ER -