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Limits of thermal and hydrological tolerance in a foundation tree species (Populus fremontii) in the desert southwestern United States.

Madeline E MoranLuiza Maria Teophilo AparecidoDan F KoepkeHillary F CooperChristopher E DoughtyCatherine A GehringHeather L ThroopThomas G WhithamGerard J AllanKevin R Hultine
Published in: The New phytologist (2023)
Populus fremontii is among the most dominant, and ecologically important riparian tree species in the western United States and can thrive in hyper-arid riparian corridors. Yet, P. fremontii forests have rapidly declined over the last decade, particularly in places where temperatures sometimes exceed 50°C. We evaluated high temperature tolerance of leaf metabolism, leaf thermoregulation, and leaf hydraulic function in eight P. fremontii populations spanning a 5.3°C mean annual temperature gradient in a well-watered common garden, and at source locations throughout the lower Colorado River Basin. Two major results emerged. First, despite having an exceptionally high T crit (the temperature at which Photosystem II is disrupted) relative to other tree taxa, recent heat waves exceeded T crit , requiring evaporative leaf cooling to maintain leaf-to-air thermal safety margins. Second, in midsummer, genotypes from the warmest locations maintained lower midday leaf temperatures, a higher midday stomatal conductance, and maintained turgor pressure at lower water potentials than genotypes from more temperate locations. Taken together, results suggest that under well-watered conditions, P. fremontii can regulate leaf temperature below T crit along the warm edge of its distribution. Nevertheless, reduced Colorado River flows threaten to lower water tables below levels needed for evaporative cooling during episodic heat waves.
Keyphrases
  • high temperature
  • genetic diversity
  • resting state
  • electron transfer