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Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions

Models seldom consider the effect of leaf-level biochemical acclimation to temperature when scaling forest water use. Therefore, the dependence of transpiration on temperature acclimation was investigated at the within-crown scale in climatically contrasting genotypes of Acer rubrum L., cv. October...

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Autores principales: Bauerle, William L., Bowden, Joseph D., Wang, G. Geoff, Shahba, Mohamed A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2736884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19561047
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erp206
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author Bauerle, William L.
Bowden, Joseph D.
Wang, G. Geoff
Shahba, Mohamed A.
author_facet Bauerle, William L.
Bowden, Joseph D.
Wang, G. Geoff
Shahba, Mohamed A.
author_sort Bauerle, William L.
collection PubMed
description Models seldom consider the effect of leaf-level biochemical acclimation to temperature when scaling forest water use. Therefore, the dependence of transpiration on temperature acclimation was investigated at the within-crown scale in climatically contrasting genotypes of Acer rubrum L., cv. October Glory (OG) and Summer Red (SR). The effects of temperature acclimation on intracanopy gradients in transpiration over a range of realistic forest growth temperatures were also assessed by simulation. Physiological parameters were applied, with or without adjustment for temperature acclimation, to account for transpiration responses to growth temperature. Both types of parameterization were scaled up to stand transpiration (expressed per unit leaf area) with an individual tree model (MAESTRA) to assess how transpiration might be affected by spatial and temporal distributions of foliage properties. The MAESTRA model performed well, but its reproducibility was dependent on physiological parameters acclimated to daytime temperature. Concordance correlation coefficients between measured and predicted transpiration were higher (0.95 and 0.98 versus 0.87 and 0.96) when model parameters reflected acclimated growth temperature. In response to temperature increases, the southern genotype (SR) transpiration responded more than the northern (OG). Conditions of elevated long-term temperature acclimation further separate their transpiration differences. Results demonstrate the importance of accounting for leaf-level physiological adjustments that are sensitive to microclimate changes and the use of provenance-, ecotype-, and/or genotype-specific parameter sets, two components likely to improve the accuracy of site-level and ecosystem-level estimates of transpiration flux.
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spelling pubmed-27368842009-09-03 Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions Bauerle, William L. Bowden, Joseph D. Wang, G. Geoff Shahba, Mohamed A. J Exp Bot Research Papers Models seldom consider the effect of leaf-level biochemical acclimation to temperature when scaling forest water use. Therefore, the dependence of transpiration on temperature acclimation was investigated at the within-crown scale in climatically contrasting genotypes of Acer rubrum L., cv. October Glory (OG) and Summer Red (SR). The effects of temperature acclimation on intracanopy gradients in transpiration over a range of realistic forest growth temperatures were also assessed by simulation. Physiological parameters were applied, with or without adjustment for temperature acclimation, to account for transpiration responses to growth temperature. Both types of parameterization were scaled up to stand transpiration (expressed per unit leaf area) with an individual tree model (MAESTRA) to assess how transpiration might be affected by spatial and temporal distributions of foliage properties. The MAESTRA model performed well, but its reproducibility was dependent on physiological parameters acclimated to daytime temperature. Concordance correlation coefficients between measured and predicted transpiration were higher (0.95 and 0.98 versus 0.87 and 0.96) when model parameters reflected acclimated growth temperature. In response to temperature increases, the southern genotype (SR) transpiration responded more than the northern (OG). Conditions of elevated long-term temperature acclimation further separate their transpiration differences. Results demonstrate the importance of accounting for leaf-level physiological adjustments that are sensitive to microclimate changes and the use of provenance-, ecotype-, and/or genotype-specific parameter sets, two components likely to improve the accuracy of site-level and ecosystem-level estimates of transpiration flux. Oxford University Press 2009-09 2009-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2736884/ /pubmed/19561047 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erp206 Text en © 2009 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This paper is available online free of all access charges (see http://jxb.oxfordjournals.org/open_access.html for further details)
spellingShingle Research Papers
Bauerle, William L.
Bowden, Joseph D.
Wang, G. Geoff
Shahba, Mohamed A.
Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title_full Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title_fullStr Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title_short Exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
title_sort exploring the importance of within-canopy spatial temperature variation on transpiration predictions
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2736884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19561047
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erp206
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