TY - JOUR
T1 - Differential ecophysiological response of a major Mediterranean pine species across a climatic gradient
AU - Klein, Tamir
AU - Di Matteo, Giovanni
AU - Rotenberg, Eyal
AU - Cohen, Shabtai
AU - Yakir, Dan
N1 - Jewish National Fund (Alberta-Israel program) [90-9-608-08]; Sussman Center for Environmental Research; France-Israel High Council for Research Scientific and Technological Cooperation [3-6735]; Minerva Foundation; Cathy Wills and Robert Lewis Program in Environmental Science; COST scientific program FORMAN [FP0601-6298]; COST scientific program SIBAE [ES0806-05352]; Karshon foundation grant provided through KKL-JNFJewish National Fund (Alberta-Israel program 90-9-608-08); The Sussman Center for Environmental Research; France-Israel High Council for Research Scientific and Technological Cooperation (project 3-6735); the Minerva Foundation; and the Cathy Wills and Robert Lewis Program in Environmental Science.The authors thank Gabriel Schiller and Ernesto Fusaro for providing access to provenance trials in Israel and in Italy, respectively; Francesco Righi and Marco Riccardi for assistance in field sampling; and Emanuela Negreanu for technical expertise and help with the delta<SUP>13</SUP>C analyses. GDM and TK acknowledge the COST scientific programs FORMAN and SIBAE for travel grants FP0601-6298 and ES0806-05352, allowing their scientific missions in Israel and Italy, respectively. TK acknowledges the Karshon foundation grant provided through KKL-JNF.
PY - 2013/1
Y1 - 2013/1
N2 - The rate of migration and in situ genetic variation in forest trees may not be sufficient to compete with the current rapid rate of climate change. Ecophysiological adjustments of key traits, however, could complement these processes and allow sustained survival and growth across a wide range of climatic conditions. This was tested in Pinus halepensis Miller by examining seven physiological and phenological parameters in five provenances growing in three common garden plots along a climatic transect from meso-Mediterranean (MM) to thermo-Mediterranean (TM) and semi-arid (SA) climates. Differential responses to variations in ambient climatic conditions were observed in three key traits: (i) growing season length decreased with drying in all provenances examined (from 165 under TM climate to 100 days under SA climate, on average); (ii) water use efficiency (WUE) increased with drying, but to a different extent in different provenances, and on average from 80, to 95, to 110 μmol CO 2 mol-1 H2O under MM, TM and SA climates, respectively; (iii) xylem native embolism was stable across climates, but varied markedly among different provenances (percent loss of conductivity, was below 5% in two provenances and above 35% in others). The results indicated that changes in growing season length and WUE were important contributors to tree growth across climates, whereas xylem native embolism negatively correlated with tree survival. The results indicated that irrespective of slow processes (e.g., migration, genetic adaptation), the capacity for ecophysiological adjustments combined with existing variations among provenances could help sustain P. halepensis, a major Mediterranean tree species, under relatively extreme warming and drying climatic trends.
AB - The rate of migration and in situ genetic variation in forest trees may not be sufficient to compete with the current rapid rate of climate change. Ecophysiological adjustments of key traits, however, could complement these processes and allow sustained survival and growth across a wide range of climatic conditions. This was tested in Pinus halepensis Miller by examining seven physiological and phenological parameters in five provenances growing in three common garden plots along a climatic transect from meso-Mediterranean (MM) to thermo-Mediterranean (TM) and semi-arid (SA) climates. Differential responses to variations in ambient climatic conditions were observed in three key traits: (i) growing season length decreased with drying in all provenances examined (from 165 under TM climate to 100 days under SA climate, on average); (ii) water use efficiency (WUE) increased with drying, but to a different extent in different provenances, and on average from 80, to 95, to 110 μmol CO 2 mol-1 H2O under MM, TM and SA climates, respectively; (iii) xylem native embolism was stable across climates, but varied markedly among different provenances (percent loss of conductivity, was below 5% in two provenances and above 35% in others). The results indicated that changes in growing season length and WUE were important contributors to tree growth across climates, whereas xylem native embolism negatively correlated with tree survival. The results indicated that irrespective of slow processes (e.g., migration, genetic adaptation), the capacity for ecophysiological adjustments combined with existing variations among provenances could help sustain P. halepensis, a major Mediterranean tree species, under relatively extreme warming and drying climatic trends.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84875770337&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/treephys/tps116
DO - 10.1093/treephys/tps116
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0829-318X
VL - 33
SP - 26
EP - 36
JO - Tree Physiology
JF - Tree Physiology
IS - 1
ER -