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Seasonal trends in leaf-level photosynthetic capacity and water use efficiency in a North American Eastern deciduous forest and their impact on canopy-scale gas exchange.

Kenneth J DavidsonJulien LamourAnna McPherranAlistair RogersShawn P Serbin
Published in: The New phytologist (2023)
Vegetative transpiration (E) and photosynthetic carbon assimilation (A) are known to be seasonally dynamic, with changes in their ratio determining the marginal water use efficiency (WUE). Despite an understanding that stomata play a mechanistic role in regulating WUE, it is still unclear how stomatal and nonstomatal processes influence change in WUE over the course of the growing season. As a result, limited understanding of the primary physiological drivers of seasonal dynamics of canopy WUE remains one of the largest uncertainties in earth system model projections of carbon and water exchange in temperate deciduous forest ecosystems. We investigated seasonal patterns in leaf-level physiological, hydraulic, and anatomical properties, including the seasonal progress of the stomatal slope parameter (g 1 ; inversely proportional to WUE) and the maximum carboxylation rate (V cmax ). V cmax and g 1 were seasonally variable; however, their patterns were not temporally synchronized. g 1 generally showed an increasing trend until late in the season, while V cmax peaked during the midsummer months. Seasonal progression of V cmax was primarily driven by changes in leaf structural, and anatomical characteristics, while seasonal changes in g 1 were most strongly related to changes in V cmax and leaf hydraulics. Using a seasonally variable V cmax and g 1 to parameterize a canopy-scale gas exchange model increased seasonally aggregated A and E by 3% and 16%, respectively.
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