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Título
Foliar plasticity related to gradients of heat and drought stress across crown orientations in three Mediterranean Quercus species
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Foliar plasticity
Mediterranean Quercus species
Plant
Climate change
Water stress
Quercus species
Radiation levels
Clasificación UNESCO
2417.19 Fisiología Vegetal
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Sean T. Michaletz, University of British Columbia, CANADA
Citación
Mediavilla S, Martín I, Babiano J, Escudero A (2019) Foliar plasticity related to gradients of heat and drought stress across crown orientations in three Mediterranean Quercus species. PLoS ONE 14(10): e0224462. https://doi. org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224462
Resumen
[EN]Studies on plasticity at the level of a single individual plant provide indispensable information to predict leaf responses to climate change, because they allow better identification of the environmental factors that determine differences in leaf traits in the absence of genetic differences. Most of these studies have focused on the responses of leaf traits to variations in the light environment along vertical gradients, thus paying less attention to possible differences in the intensity of water stress among canopy orientations. In this paper, we analyzed the differences in leaf traits traditionally associated with changes in the intensity of water stress between east and west crown orientations in three Quercus species. The leaves facing west experienced similar solar radiation levels but higher maximum temperatures and lower daily minimum water potentials than those of the east orientation. In response to these differences, the leaves of the west orientation showed smaller size and less chlorophyll concentration, higher percentage of palisade tissue and higher density of stomata and trichomes. These responses would confirm the role of such traits in the tolerance to water stress and control of water losses by transpiration. For all traits, the species with the longest leaf life span exhibited the greatest plasticity between orientations. By contrast, no differences between canopy positions were observed for leaf thickness, leaf mass per unit area and venation patterns.
URI
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0224462
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