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A bitter future for coffee production? Exploring physiological traits associated with yield reveals high vulnerability to hydraulic failure in Coffea canephora cultivated in the Western Amazon.

Aldo Custódio MaxLucas Loram-LourençoFabiano Guimarães SilvaLuan Henrique Martiniano de SouzaJairo Rafael Machado DiasMarcelo Curitiba EspíndulaFernanda Dos Santos FarneseWilliam HammondJose M Torres-RuizHervé CochardPaulo Eduardo Menezes-Silva
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2022)
The increase in frequency and intensity of drought events have hampered coffee production in the already threatened Amazon region, yet little is known about key aspects underlying the variability in yield potential across genotypes, nor to what extent higher productivity is linked to reduced drought tolerance. Here we explored how variations in morphoanatomical and physiological leaf traits can explain differences in yield and vulnerability to embolism in 11 Coffea canephora genotypes cultivated in the Western Amazon. The remarkable variation in coffee yield across genotypes was tightly related to differences in their carbon assimilation and water transport capacities, revealing a diffusive limitation to photosynthesis linked by hydraulic constraints. Although a clear trade-off between water transport efficiency and safety was not detected, all the studied genotypes operated in a narrow and/or negative hydraulic safety margin, suggesting a high vulnerability to leaf hydraulic failure (HF), especially on the most productive genotypes. Modeling exercises revealed that variations in HF across genotypes were mainly associated with differences in leaf water vapor leakage when stomata are closed, reflecting contrasting growth strategies. Overall, our results provide a new perspective on the challenges of sustaining coffee production in the Amazon region under a drier and warmer climate. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • genome wide
  • risk assessment
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • gene expression
  • body composition
  • plant growth