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Differentiated responses of plant water use regulation to drought in Robinia pseudoacacia plantations on the Chinese Loess Plateau

Xiaoying Yan, Zhongdian Zhang, Xiaofang Zhao, Mingbin Huang, Xiaofei Wu, Tianqi Guo

AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT(2024)

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Abstract
Robinia pseudoacacia plantations play an important role in improving the ecological environment of the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP). However, drought stress is emerging as the major threat of sustainable growth in R. pseudoacacia plantations under the background of global warming and increasing water scarcity. Investigating the responses of plant water use to drought and the associated regulating mechanism in R. pseudoacacia is helpful for improving understanding of plant survival strategies and developing sustainable forest management practices under climate change. In this study, we monitored the canopy transpiration (Tr) dynamics with synchronous observations of soil water content and leaf water potentials in R. pseudoacacia plantations during two different hydrological years (2021 and 2022) at two sites featuring semihumid (Changwu) and semiarid (Mizhi) climate conditions. Results showed that normalized Tr exhibited stronger relationships with meteorological variables at the Changwu site than Mizhi site, as well as under non-drought condition compared to drought condition. The canopy stomatal conductance (Gc) decreased significantly with increasing vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and soil drought at both sites. The sensitivity of Gc to VPD revealed more strict stomatal regulation of transpiration in response to drought at the Changwu site, and less strict stomatal regulation at the Mizhi site. Relationship between midday and predawn water potentials indicated a partial isohydric strategy in response to drought, and reflected stomatal closure tends to occur more rapidly than hydraulic conductivity loss in R. pseudoacacia. These results suggest that the Tr and Gc values of R. pseudoacacia and their sensitivity to climate weakened as soil drought progresses and varied with different climatic conditions, and R. pseudoacacia exhibited flexible stomatal regulation of transpiration and water use strategies in response to drought.
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Key words
Canopy dieback,Drought,Stomatal regulation,Transpiration,Water use strategy
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