Plants are characterized by the iso/anisohydry continuum depending on how they regulate leaf water potential (?L). However, how iso/anisohydry changes over time in response to year-to-year variations in environmental dryness and how such responses vary across different regions remains poorly characterized.
We investigated how dryness, represented by aridity index, affects the interannual variability of ecosystem iso/anisohydry at the regional scale, estimated using satellite microwave vegetation optical depth (VOD) observations. This ecosystem-level analysis was further complemented with published field observations of ?L at the species level.
We found different behaviors in the directionality and sensitivity of isohydricity (s) with respect to the interannual variation of dryness in different ecosystems. These behaviors can largely be differentiated by the average dryness of the ecosystem itself: in mesic ecosystems, s decreases in drier years, albeit at a higher rate; in xeric ecosystems, s increases in drier years, albeit at a lower rate. These results were supported by the species-level synthesis.
Our study suggests that how plants adjust their water use across years – as revealed by their interannual variability in isohydricity – depends on the dryness of plants’ living environment. This finding advances our understanding of plant responses to drought at regional scales.
Published: April 15, 2021
Citation
Wu G., K. Guan, Y. Li, K.A. Novick, X. Feng, N.G. McDowell, and A.G. Konings, et al. 2021.Interannual variability of ecosystem iso/anisohydry is regulated by environmental dryness.New Phytologist 229, no. 5:2562-2575.PNNL-SA-156537.doi:10.1111/nph.17040