Litcius/Paper detail

Provenance Differences in Water-Use Efficiency Among Sessile Oak Populations Grown in a Mesic Common Garden

Arivoara Rabarijaona, Stéphane Ponton, Didier Bert, Alexis Ducousso, Béatrice Richard, Joseph Levillain, I still have a question on alternate names : I have two very wrong alternate names "GARNIER‐GÉRÉ, Pauline" "Le Thiec, Didier" ; Pauline only turns up in one common publication in my list https://api.openalex.org/w4302973150 , coming from this HAL record and all affiliations seem correct. No other wrong publications in my list (at least not with Paulines name). So something went rather wrong here

2022Frontiers in Forests and Global Change19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Context As a widespread species, sessile oak ( Quercus petraea ) populations occupy a wide range of ecological conditions, with large gradients of soil water availability. Drought acclimation involves a plastic increase in water-use efficiency (WUE), a trait that is easily measured using the carbon isotope composition (δ 13 C). However, the question remains whether WUE is an adaptive trait that impacts the fitness of trees in natural environments. Objectives and Methods To investigate whether WUE was a drought-adaptive trait, we studied a sample of 600 trees originating from 16 provenances, grown for 21 years in a common garden. Intrinsic WUE (WUE i ), estimated from tree ring δ 13 C, was compared among and within populations for three climatically contrasted years. The adaptive character of WUE i was evaluated by relating population mean WUE i , as well as its plasticity to drought, to the pedoclimatic conditions of their provenance sites. The contribution of WUE i to tree and population fitness was finally assessed from the relationship between WUE i and tree radial growth (GI). Results Significant differences in WUE i were found among populations but a much larger variability was observed within than among populations. The population WUE i of the juvenile oak trees growing in the relatively mesic conditions of the common garden showed no relationship with a modeled water deficit index for the provenance sites. However, a higher population WUE i plasticity to severe drought was related to a higher proportion of silt and carbon and a lower proportion of sand in the soil of the provenance sites. In response to severe drought, populations with a higher increase in WUE i showed a lower decrease in GI. Populations with lower GI reduction were from sites with higher vapor pressure deficit in May–July (VPD). For the wet year only, populations with a higher WUE i also had a higher GI. Conclusion The correlations observed at the common garden site between (i) population means of WUE i plasticity to drought and soil texture of the provenance sites, and (ii) GI plasticity to drought and VPD, suggested a local adaptation of sessile oak.

Topics & Concepts

Water-use efficiencyQuercus petraeaBiologyPopulationContext (archaeology)AgronomyBotanyEcologyIrrigationDemographyPaleontologySociologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsTree-ring climate responsesForest ecology and management