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Hydraulic prediction of drought-induced plant dieback and top-kill depends on leaf habit and growth form.

Ya-Jun ChenBrendan ChoatFrank J SterckPhisamai MaenpuenMasatoshi KatabuchiShu-Bin ZhangRichard T CorlettRafael Silva OliveiraYong-Jiang ZhangJing-Xian ShenKun-Fang CaoSteven Jansen
Published in: Ecology letters (2021)
Hydraulic failure caused by severe drought contributes to aboveground dieback and whole-plant death. The extent to which dieback or whole-plant death can be predicted by plant hydraulic traits has rarely been tested among species with different leaf habits and/or growth forms. We investigated 19 hydraulic traits in 40 woody species in a tropical savanna and their potential correlations with drought response during an extreme drought event during the El Niño-Southern Oscillation in 2015. Plant hydraulic trait variation was partitioned substantially by leaf habit but not growth form along a trade-off axis between traits that support drought tolerance versus avoidance. Semi-deciduous species and shrubs had the highest branch dieback and top-kill (complete aboveground death) among the leaf habits or growth forms. Dieback and top-kill were well explained by combining hydraulic traits with leaf habit and growth form, suggesting integrating life history traits with hydraulic traits will yield better predictions.
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