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Canopy-level stomatal narrowing in adult Fagus sylvatica under O3 stress – Means of preventing enhanced O3 uptake under high O3 exposure?
2015
Matyssek, R. | Baumgarten, M. | Hummel, U. | Häberle, K.-H. | Kitao, M. | Wieser, G.
Spatio-temporally consistent O3 doses are demonstrated in adult Fagus sylvatica from the Kranzberg Forest free-air fumigation experiment, covering cross-canopy and whole-seasonal scopes through sap flow measurement. Given O3-driven closure of stomata, we hypothesized enhanced whole-tree level O3 influx to be prevented under enhanced O3 exposure. Although foliage transpiration rate was lowered under twice-ambient O3 around noon by 30% along with canopy conductance, the hypothesis was falsified, as O3 influx was raised by 25%. Nevertheless, the twice-ambient/ambient ratio of O3 uptake was smaller by about 20% than that of O3 exposure, suggesting stomatal limitation of uptake. The O3 response was traceable from leaves across branches to the canopy, where peak transpiration rates resembled those of shade rather than sun branches. Rainy/overcast-day and nightly O3 uptake is quantified and discussed. Whole-seasonal canopy-level validation of modelled with sap flow-derived O3 flux becomes available in assessing O3 risk for forest trees.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Ozone uptake by adult urban trees based on sap flow measurement
2012
Wang, Hua | Zhou, Weiqi | Wang, Xiaoke | Gao, Fuyuan | Zheng, Hua | Tong, Lei | Ouyang, Z. (Zhiyun)
The O₃ uptake in 17 adult trees of six urban species was evaluated by the sap flow-based approach under free atmospheric conditions. The results showed very large species differences in ground area scaled whole-tree ozone uptake ( [Formula: see text] ), with estimates ranging from 0.61 ± 0.07 nmol m⁻² s⁻¹ in Robinia pseudoacacia to 4.80 ± 1.04 nmol m⁻² s⁻¹ in Magnolia liliiflora. However, average [Formula: see text] by deciduous foliages was not significantly higher than that by evergreen ones (3.13 vs 2.21 nmol m⁻² s⁻¹, p = 0.160). Species of high canopy conductance for O₃ ( [Formula: see text] ) took up more O₃ than those of low [Formula: see text] , but that their sensitivity to vapour pressure deficit (D) were also higher, and their [Formula: see text] decreased faster with increasing D, regardless of species. The responses of [Formula: see text] to D and total radiation led to the relative high flux of O₃ uptake, indicating high ozone risk for urban tree species.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Combining sap flow and eddy covariance approaches to derive stomatal and non-stomatal O3 fluxes in a forest stand
2010
Nunn, A.J. | Cieslik, S. | Metzger, U. | Wieser, G. | Matyssek, R.
Stomatal O3 fluxes to a mixed beech/spruce stand (Fagus sylvatica/Picea abies) in Central Europe were determined using two different approaches. The sap flow technique yielded the tree-level transpiration, whereas the eddy covariance method provided the stand-level evapotranspiration. Both data were then converted into stomatal ozone fluxes, exemplifying this novel concept for July 2007. Sap flow-based stomatal O3 flux was 33% of the total O3 flux, whereas derivation from evapotranspiration rates in combination with the Penman-Monteith algorithm amounted to 47%. In addition to this proportional difference, the sap flow-based assessment yielded lower levels of stomatal O3 flux and reflected stomatal regulation rather than O3 exposure, paralleling the daily courses of canopy conductance for water vapor and eddy covariance-based total stand-level O3 flux. The demonstrated combination of sap flow and eddy covariance approaches supports the development of O3 risk assessment in forests from O3 exposure towards flux-based concepts.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Exposure to moderate concentrations of tropospheric ozone impairs tree stomatal response to carbon dioxide
2011
Onandia, Gabriela | Olsson, Anna-Karin | Barth, Sabine | King, John S. | Uddling, Johan
With rising concentrations of both atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) and tropospheric ozone (O₃), it is important to better understand the interacting effects of these two trace gases on plant physiology affecting land-atmosphere gas exchange. We investigated the effect of growth under elevated CO₂ and O₃, singly and in combination, on the primary short-term stomatal response to CO₂ concentration in paper birch at the Aspen FACE experiment. Leaves from trees grown in elevated CO₂ and/or O₃ exhibited weaker short-term responses of stomatal conductance to both an increase and a decrease in CO₂ concentration from current ambient level. The impairement of the stomatal CO₂ response by O₃ most likely developed progressively over the growing season as assessed by sap flux measurements. Our results suggest that expectations of plant water-savings and reduced stomatal air pollution uptake under rising atmospheric CO₂ may not hold for northern hardwood forests under concurrently rising tropospheric O₃.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Urbanization intensifies tree sap flux but divergently for different tree species groups in China
2022
Ouyang, Lei | Du, Jie | Zhang, Zhenzhen | Zhao, Ping | Zhu, Liwei | Ni, Guangyan
In recent years, positive and negative effects of urbanization on forest ecosystem have been reported by many studies, while some uncertainties about the impact of urbanization-induced spatial heterogeneity of environmental factors on forest systems still remain unclear. In this study, we analyzed the urbanization effects on sap flux of a common subtropical evergreen tree species Schima superba along an urban–rural gradient in Guangdong Province, South China, and identified the consistency of these results among different groups (evergreen, deciduous, and coniferous species) using data from 83 previously published studies in China. The mean sap flux density (Fd) of S. superba in Xiaoqingshan (XQS), Heshan (HS), Dinghushan (DHS), and Shimentai (SMT), along the urban–rural gradient was 40.9 g m⁻² s⁻¹, 32.1 g m⁻² s⁻¹, 17.0 g m⁻² s⁻¹, and 17.5 g m⁻² s⁻¹, respectively, presenting a decreasing trend with the diminishing urbanization. This pattern in Fd tended to enlarge with tree size and was well confirmed by the enhanced leaf transpiration rate (by 119%) and photosynthetic rate (by 8.8%) for the S. superba in another urbanization gradient from the urban (Hangzhou, denoted as “HZ”) to rural sites (Jiande, denoted as “JD”) in Zhejiang Province, East China, which has similar climatic condition and urbanization with Guangdong Province. We attributed such positive effects to the decreased sapwood density and specific leaf area (SLA), as well as the increased Huber value (sap wood area/leaf area) and the sap wood specific hydraulic conductivity (KS). We also found that pollutant emission exerted more impact on Fd than climatic factors change, since the variation of the latter was not large enough to cause significant change of Fd under the same climatic zone. In addition, we conducted a principal component analysis (PCA) based on the published 83 studies. Results showed Fd of evergreen tree species was related positively to principle 1 and negatively to principle 2, respectively, whereas the Fd of deciduous broadleaf and coniferous tree species was positively and negatively related to both principles, respectively. This study demonstrated the potential impact of urbanization-related pollutant emission changes on water use of forest trees and the growth among different groups.
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