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      Leaf water use in heterobaric and homobaric leafed canopy tree species in a Malaysian tropical rain forest

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      Photosynthetica
      Springer Nature America, Inc

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          Drought sensitivity shapes species distribution patterns in tropical forests.

          Although patterns of tree species distributions along environmental gradients have been amply documented in tropical forests, mechanisms causing these patterns are seldom known. Efforts to evaluate proposed mechanisms have been hampered by a lack of comparative data on species' reactions to relevant axes of environmental variation. Here we show that differential drought sensitivity shapes plant distributions in tropical forests at both regional and local scales. Our analyses are based on experimental field assessments of drought sensitivity of 48 species of trees and shrubs, and on their local and regional distributions within a network of 122 inventory sites spanning a rainfall gradient across the Isthmus of Panama. Our results suggest that niche differentiation with respect to soil water availability is a direct determinant of both local- and regional-scale distributions of tropical trees. Changes in soil moisture availability caused by global climate change and forest fragmentation are therefore likely to alter tropical species distributions, community composition and diversity.
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            New Equations for Computing Vapor Pressure and Enhancement Factor

            Arden Buck (1981)
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              Is Open Access

              Responses of leaf stomatal density to water status and its relationship with photosynthesis in a grass

              Responses of plant leaf stomatal conductance and photosynthesis to water deficit have been extensively reported; however, little is known concerning the relationships of stomatal density with regard to water status and gas exchange. The responses of stomatal density to leaf water status were determined, and correlation with specific leaf area (SLA) in a photosynthetic study of a perennial grass, Leymus chinensis, subjected to different soil moisture contents. Moderate water deficits had positive effects on stomatal number, but more severe deficits led to a reduction, described in a quadratic parabolic curve. The stomatal size obviously decreased with water deficit, and stomatal density was positively correlated with stomatal conductance (g s), net CO2 assimilation rate (A n), and water use efficiency (WUE). A significantly negative correlation of SLA with stomatal density was also observed, suggesting that the balance between leaf area and its matter may be associated with the guard cell number. The present results indicate that high flexibilities in stomatal density and guard cell size will change in response to water status, and this process may be closely associated with photosynthesis and water use efficiency.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Photosynthetica
                Photosynthetica
                Springer Nature America, Inc
                0300-3604
                1573-9058
                June 2015
                March 26 2015
                June 2015
                : 53
                : 2
                : 177-186
                Article
                10.1007/s11099-015-0105-6
                5dc2f40f-9a46-4dc3-8e7c-6272322be4de
                © 2015
                History

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