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Morphological,anatomical and physiological responses of Campylotropis polyantha (Franch.) Schindl. seedlings to progressive water stress
Authors:Fang-Lan Li  Wei-Kai BaoNing Wu
Institution:Key Laboratory of Ecological Restoration, Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610041, PR China
Abstract:In this study we implemented a potted water supply experiment for 100 days by a completely random sole-factored design with five treatments: 100% (W100), 80% (W80), 60% (W60), 40% (W40) and 20% (W20) of water holding capacity (WHC), corresponding to the soil volumetric water content (SVWC) maintained at 38.8 ± 0.3%, 31.6 ± 1.7%, 25.6 ± 1.3%, 16.5 ± 0.7%, and 8.1 ± 1.1%, respectively. The objective was to evaluate the ability of the 2-month-old Campylotropis polyantha (Franch.) Schindl. seedlings to tolerate drought and to explore the mechanism resisting drought. We monitored the growth process of seedling height and leaf number monthly and further investigated those changes in plant growth, dry mass accumulation and allocation, water-use efficiency (WUE), leaf functional traits, chlorophyll a fluorescence and pigment contents across the water deficit gradient. We found that the seedlings presented optimal growth, dry mass production, and physiological activity only at the W100 and W80 treatments and afterwards significantly decreased with progressive water deficit; the WUE was improved under moderate water stress (W60 and W40) but reduced under severe stress (W20). The serious leaf shedding, growth stopping and seedling death under the W20 condition revealed that the current-year shrub seedlings could not withstand severe drought. Water stress-induced decrease in total plant leaf area due to a combination of limited expansion of younger leaves and shedding of old leaves caused the leaf area ratio reduction under drought. The reduced mesophyll cell was a major anatomical response of leaves along the water stress gradient. The progressive water stress significantly damaged light harvesting complex and reduced photochemical processes and PSII activity. Our results clearly showed that the current-year shrub seedlings took the avoidance and tolerance mechanisms to withstand progressive drought stress and around 25.6% SVWC and around 12.3% SVWC separately are thresholds to limit the optimal growth and dry mass production and to last growing and surviving for the current-year shrub seedlings.
Keywords:Water deficit  Drought adaptation  Leaf traits  Morphological plasticity  Chlorophyll a fluorescence  Water threshold
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