Seasonal patterns of xylem sap pH, xylem abscisic acid concentration, leaf water potential and stomatal conductance of six evergreen and deciduous Australian savanna tree species
Dane S. Thomas and Derek Eamus
Australian Journal of Botany 50(2) 229 - 236
Abstract
Deciduous trees of Australia’s northern savannas typically have
less-negative leaf water potentials than evergreen species and their stomata
are more sensitive to soil drought than those of evergreen species. This paper
presents the first investigation of the role of xylem sap pH and abscisic acid
content in explaining stomatal behaviour of Australian trees in the field. We
measured stomatal conductance, leaf-to-air vapour pressure difference
(D) and leaf water potential, xylem abscisic acid (ABA)
concentration and xylem sap pH of evergreen, semideciduous and fully deciduous
tree species in the field over a 15-month period. Measurements were made
during both the wet and the dry seasons. Stomata closed in response to
increasing D in both evergreen and deciduous species and
were equally sensitive to increasing D or declining leaf
water potential. Xylem ABA concentration increased with declining leaf water
potential in evergreen and semi-deciduous species, but not deciduous species.
Similarly, there was an inverse correlation between stomatal conductance and
xylem ABA concentration. Xylem sap pH increased as leaf water potential
declined from wet to dry season for evergreen and semi-deciduous species but
not for deciduous species. Deciduous species had less-negative water
potentials and lower xylem ABA concentrations than evergreen species or
semi-deciduous species. We conclude that changes in xylem sap pH and ABA
content do occur seasonally in the wet–dry tropics of Australia and that
these changes influence stomatal conductance, but only in evergreen and
semi-deciduous species. Deciduous species do not appear to modulate either of
these chemical signals.
Full text doi:10.1071/BT01045
© CSIRO 2002





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