Different responses of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in leaf and tree-ring organic matter to lethal soil drought

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Different responses of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in leaf and tree-ring organic matter to lethal soil drought. / Lehmann, Marco M; Diao, Haoyu; Ouyang, Shengnan; Gessler, Arthur.

in: TREE PHYSIOL, Jahrgang 44, Nr. 5, tpae043, 05.05.2024.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{d45fe447d2b54b10bf7bbdce65b5296c,
title = "Different responses of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in leaf and tree-ring organic matter to lethal soil drought",
abstract = "The oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition (δ18O, δ2H) of plant tissues are key tools for the reconstruction of hydrological and plant physiological processes and may therefore be used to disentangle the reasons for tree mortality. However, how both elements respond to soil drought conditions before death has rarely been investigated. To test this, we performed a greenhouse study and determined predisposing fertilization and lethal soil drought effects on δ18O and δ2H values of organic matter in leaves and tree rings of living and dead saplings of five European tree species. For mechanistic insights, we additionally measured isotopic (i.e. δ18O and δ2H values of leaf and twig water), physiological (i.e. leaf water potential and gas-exchange) and metabolic traits (i.e. leaf and stem non-structural carbohydrate concentration, carbon-to-nitrogen ratios). Across all species, lethal soil drought generally caused a homogenous 2H-enrichment in leaf and tree-ring organic matter, but a low and heterogenous δ18O response in the same tissues. Unlike δ18O values, δ2H values of tree-ring organic matter were correlated with those of leaf and twig water and with plant physiological traits across treatments and species. The 2H-enrichment in plant organic matter also went along with a decrease in stem starch concentrations under soil drought compared with well-watered conditions. In contrast, the predisposing fertilization had generally no significant effect on any tested isotopic, physiological and metabolic traits. We propose that the 2H-enrichment in the dead trees is related to (i) the plant water isotopic composition, (ii) metabolic processes shaping leaf non-structural carbohydrates, (iii) the use of carbon reserves for growth and (iv) species-specific physiological adjustments. The homogenous stress imprint on δ2H but not on δ18O suggests that the former could be used as a proxy to reconstruct soil droughts and underlying processes of tree mortality.",
keywords = "Plant Leaves/metabolism, Droughts, Trees/metabolism, Soil/chemistry, Oxygen Isotopes/analysis, Water/metabolism, Deuterium/metabolism, Plant Stems/metabolism",
author = "Lehmann, {Marco M} and Haoyu Diao and Shengnan Ouyang and Arthur Gessler",
note = "{\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.",
year = "2024",
month = may,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1093/treephys/tpae043",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
journal = "TREE PHYSIOL",
issn = "0829-318X",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Different responses of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in leaf and tree-ring organic matter to lethal soil drought

AU - Lehmann, Marco M

AU - Diao, Haoyu

AU - Ouyang, Shengnan

AU - Gessler, Arthur

N1 - © The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.

PY - 2024/5/5

Y1 - 2024/5/5

N2 - The oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition (δ18O, δ2H) of plant tissues are key tools for the reconstruction of hydrological and plant physiological processes and may therefore be used to disentangle the reasons for tree mortality. However, how both elements respond to soil drought conditions before death has rarely been investigated. To test this, we performed a greenhouse study and determined predisposing fertilization and lethal soil drought effects on δ18O and δ2H values of organic matter in leaves and tree rings of living and dead saplings of five European tree species. For mechanistic insights, we additionally measured isotopic (i.e. δ18O and δ2H values of leaf and twig water), physiological (i.e. leaf water potential and gas-exchange) and metabolic traits (i.e. leaf and stem non-structural carbohydrate concentration, carbon-to-nitrogen ratios). Across all species, lethal soil drought generally caused a homogenous 2H-enrichment in leaf and tree-ring organic matter, but a low and heterogenous δ18O response in the same tissues. Unlike δ18O values, δ2H values of tree-ring organic matter were correlated with those of leaf and twig water and with plant physiological traits across treatments and species. The 2H-enrichment in plant organic matter also went along with a decrease in stem starch concentrations under soil drought compared with well-watered conditions. In contrast, the predisposing fertilization had generally no significant effect on any tested isotopic, physiological and metabolic traits. We propose that the 2H-enrichment in the dead trees is related to (i) the plant water isotopic composition, (ii) metabolic processes shaping leaf non-structural carbohydrates, (iii) the use of carbon reserves for growth and (iv) species-specific physiological adjustments. The homogenous stress imprint on δ2H but not on δ18O suggests that the former could be used as a proxy to reconstruct soil droughts and underlying processes of tree mortality.

AB - The oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition (δ18O, δ2H) of plant tissues are key tools for the reconstruction of hydrological and plant physiological processes and may therefore be used to disentangle the reasons for tree mortality. However, how both elements respond to soil drought conditions before death has rarely been investigated. To test this, we performed a greenhouse study and determined predisposing fertilization and lethal soil drought effects on δ18O and δ2H values of organic matter in leaves and tree rings of living and dead saplings of five European tree species. For mechanistic insights, we additionally measured isotopic (i.e. δ18O and δ2H values of leaf and twig water), physiological (i.e. leaf water potential and gas-exchange) and metabolic traits (i.e. leaf and stem non-structural carbohydrate concentration, carbon-to-nitrogen ratios). Across all species, lethal soil drought generally caused a homogenous 2H-enrichment in leaf and tree-ring organic matter, but a low and heterogenous δ18O response in the same tissues. Unlike δ18O values, δ2H values of tree-ring organic matter were correlated with those of leaf and twig water and with plant physiological traits across treatments and species. The 2H-enrichment in plant organic matter also went along with a decrease in stem starch concentrations under soil drought compared with well-watered conditions. In contrast, the predisposing fertilization had generally no significant effect on any tested isotopic, physiological and metabolic traits. We propose that the 2H-enrichment in the dead trees is related to (i) the plant water isotopic composition, (ii) metabolic processes shaping leaf non-structural carbohydrates, (iii) the use of carbon reserves for growth and (iv) species-specific physiological adjustments. The homogenous stress imprint on δ2H but not on δ18O suggests that the former could be used as a proxy to reconstruct soil droughts and underlying processes of tree mortality.

KW - Plant Leaves/metabolism

KW - Droughts

KW - Trees/metabolism

KW - Soil/chemistry

KW - Oxygen Isotopes/analysis

KW - Water/metabolism

KW - Deuterium/metabolism

KW - Plant Stems/metabolism

U2 - 10.1093/treephys/tpae043

DO - 10.1093/treephys/tpae043

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 38618738

VL - 44

JO - TREE PHYSIOL

JF - TREE PHYSIOL

SN - 0829-318X

IS - 5

M1 - tpae043

ER -