Living on the edge: a continental-scale assessment of forest vulnerability to drought

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Peters, Jennifer M.R.;López, Rosana;Nolf, Markus;Hutley, Lindsay B.;Wardlaw, Tim;Cernusak, Lucas A.;Choat, Brendan
Abstract

Globally, forests are facing an increasing risk of mass tree mortality events associated with extreme droughts and higher temperatures. Hydraulic dysfunction is considered a key mechanism of drought-triggered dieback. By leveraging the climate breadth of the Australian landscape and a national network of research sites (Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network), we conducted a continental-scale study of physiological and hydraulic traits of 33 native tree species from contrasting environments to disentangle the complexities of plant response to drought across communities. We found strong relationships between key plant hydraulic traits and site aridity. Leaf turgor loss point and xylem embolism resistance were correlated with minimum water potential experienced by each species. Across the data set, there was a strong coordination between hydraulic traits, including those linked to hydraulic safety, stomatal regulation and the cost of carbon investment into woody tissue. These results illustrate that aridity has acted as a strong selective pressure, shaping hydraulic traits of tree species across the Australian landscape. Hydraulic safety margins were constrained across sites, with species from wetter sites tending to have smaller safety margin compared with species at drier sites, suggesting trees are operating close to their hydraulic thresholds and forest biomes across the spectrum may be susceptible to shifts in climate that result in the intensification of drought.

Journal

Global Change Biology

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Volume

27

ISBN/ISSN

1365-2486

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Issue

15

Pages Count

22

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Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

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DOI

10.1111/gcb.15641