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Zhang G. Q., Mao Z., Maillard P., Brancheriau L., Gérard B., Engel Julien, Fortunel Claire, Heuret P., Maeght Jean-Luc, Martínez-Vilalta J., Stokes A. (2023). Not all sweetness and light : non-structural carbohydrate storage capacity in tree stems is decoupled from leaf but not from root economics. Functional Ecology, [Early access], p. [11 p.]. ISSN 0269-8463.

Titre du document
Not all sweetness and light : non-structural carbohydrate storage capacity in tree stems is decoupled from leaf but not from root economics
Année de publication
2023
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:001135223400001
Auteurs
Zhang G. Q., Mao Z., Maillard P., Brancheriau L., Gérard B., Engel Julien, Fortunel Claire, Heuret P., Maeght Jean-Luc, Martínez-Vilalta J., Stokes A.
Source
Functional Ecology, 2023, [Early access], p. [11 p.] ISSN 0269-8463
Non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) are considered as indicators of the balance between tree carbon sources and sinks and reflect functional strategies throughout different biomes. However, little is known about the contribution of NSC to tree economics, and in particular, whether leaf, stem and coarse root traits co-ordinate together into a whole-tree economics spectrum.Twenty-four functional traits (including NSC content) were measured in leaves, stem and coarse root xylem of up to 90 angiosperm tree species in temperate, Mediterranean and tropical climates. By performing principal component analysis and standardized major axis regression, we explored the relationships between NSC and other functional traits, as well as the effects of climate and phylogeny on these relationships.Our results revealed a covariation between leaf and coarse root NSC content and leaf economic traits, whereas stem NSC content was largely decoupled from the leaf economics spectrum that was mostly driven by leaf nitrogen content and leaf mass per area. Coarse root xylem traits were closely correlated with leaf traits, while most stem xylem traits were independent from the leaf economics spectrum but covaried with coarse root traits. Trade-offs among traits in tropical species opposed those from other climates. Evolutionary history affected relationships among certain traits but did not change overall patterns.We conclude that due to leaf habit, an extended growing season and heightened defences, tropical species form distinct conservative resource acquisition strategies. Across all climates, as the stem must provide an efficient transport route between roots and leaves, while maintaining the display of branch and leaf organs, stem xylem design and NSC storage capacity lead to a stem economics spectrum that is largely independent from the leaf spectrum, but is coupled with that of coarse roots due to anatomical continuity.Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.image
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010088869]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010088869
Contact