Higher leaf nitrogen content is linked to tighter stomatal regulation of transpiration and more efficient water use across dryland trees
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Date
2022Author
Diémé, Joseph Saturnin
Querejeta, Jose Ignacio
Prieto, Ivan
Armas, Cristina
Casanoves, Fernando
Diouf, Mayécor
Yossi, Harouna
Kaya, Bocary
Pugnaire, Francisco I.
Rusch, Graciela M.
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The least-cost economic theory of photosynthesis shows that water and nitrogen are mutually substitutable resources to achieve a given carbon gain. However, vegetation in the Sahel
has to cope with the dual challenge imposed by drought and nutrient-poor soils.
We addressed how variation in leaf nitrogen per area (Narea) modulates leaf oxygen and
carbon isotopic composition (δ18O, δ13C), as proxies of stomatal conductance and water-use
efficiency, across 34 Sahelian woody species.
Dryland species exhibited diverging leaf δ18O and δ13C values, indicating large interspecific
variation in time-integrated stomatal conductance and water-use efficiency. Structural equation modeling revealed that leaf Narea is a pivotal trait linked to multiple water-use traits. Leaf
Narea was positively linked to both δ18O and δ13C, suggesting higher carboxylation capacity
and tighter stomatal regulation of transpiration in N-rich species, which allows them to
achieve higher water-use efficiency and more conservative water use.
These adaptations represent a key physiological advantage of N-rich species, such as
legumes, that could contribute to their dominance across many dryland regions. This is the
first report of a robust mechanistic link between leaf Narea and δ18O in dryland vegetation that
is consistent with core principles of plant physiology.