June 15, 2020
Journal Article

Plant responses to rising vapor pressure deficit

Abstract

Recent decades have been characterized by increasing temperatures worldwide, resulting in an exponential climb in vapor pressure de?cit (VPD). VPD has been identi?ed as an increasingly important driver of plant functioning in terrestrial biomes and has been established as a major contributor in recent drought-induced plant mortality independent of other drivers associated with climate change. Despite this, few studies have isolated the physiological response of plant functioning to high VPD, thus limiting our understanding and ability to predict future impacts on terrestrial ecosystems. An abundance of evidence suggests that stomatal conductance declines under high VPD and transpiration increases in most species up until a given VPD threshold, leading to a cascade of subsequent impacts including reduced photosynthesis and growth, and higher risks of carbon starvation and hydraulic failure. Incorporation of photosynthetic and hydraulic traits in ‘next-generation’ land-surface models has the greatest potential for improved prediction of VPD responses at the plant- and global-scale, and will yield more mechanistic simulations of plant responses to a changing climate. By providing a fully integrated framework and evaluation of the impacts of high VPD on plant function, improvements in forecasting and long-term projections of clNovickimate impacts can be made.

Revised: December 31, 2020 | Published: June 15, 2020

Citation

Grossiord C., T.N. Buckley, L. Cernusak, K.A. Novick, B. Poulter, R.T. Siegwolf, and J.S. Sperry, et al. 2020. Plant responses to rising vapor pressure deficit. New Phytologist 226, no. 6:1550-1566. PNNL-SA-152569. doi:10.1111/nph.16485