Historical changes in the stomatal limitation of photosynthesis: empirical support for an optimality principle

2019
The ratio of leaf internal (ci ) to ambient (ca ) partial pressure of CO2 , defined here as chi, is an index of adjustments in both leaf stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rate to environmental conditions. Measurements and proxies of this ratio can be used to constrain vegetation model uncertainties for predicting terrestrial carbon uptake and water use. We test a theory based on the least-cost optimality hypothesis for modelling historical changes in chi over the 1951-2014 period, across different tree species and environmental conditions, as reconstructed from stable carbon isotopic measurements across a global network of 103 absolutely dated tree-ring chronologies. The theory predicts optimal chi as a function of air temperature, vapour pressure deficit, ca and atmospheric pressure. The theoretical model predicts 39% of the variance in chi values across sites and years, but underestimates the intersite variability in the reconstructed chi trends, resulting in only 8% of the variance in chi trends across years explained by the model. Overall, our results support theoretical predictions that variations in chi are tightly regulated by the four environmental drivers. They also suggest that explicitly accounting for the effects of plant-available soil water and other site-specific characteristics might improve the predictions.
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