Ecolog:

Additional responses to Merran:

I very much appreciate Merran's thoughtful response. I have made similar observations, but I do not know of any studies which have settled this matter. I remain open to enlightenment.

I will attempt to do justice to Merran's contributions, but am doubtful that I can accomplish that in one or two emails. I hope that Merran and others, particularly some apparently highly qualified individuals who have contacted me off list with some very provocative ideas.

In terms of the evolution of C4 plants from C3's and the abundance of the former in the tropics, I see further fertile fields for research. This may open a whole additional can of worms, but might it be that C4 evolved via a mutation that ALSO worked in more mesic circumstances rather than arising only in xeric environments? But this is too much and too distracting for now, and perhaps worthy of a spin-off thread? Later.

"A saguaro is bigger than a sagebrush, but it took longer for it to get that way?" --Merran

Exactly!

And with respect to KY bluegrass and buffalo grass, I presume that productive potential (quantity) is not as important as persistence under stress. But are not "lawns" under continuous luxury-consumption (quantity) conditions by definition? I presume that Merran will stress his buffalo grass, and not have to mow down the excess biomass as much (quality, in Merran's eyes, not quantity, which is irrelevant in that context. And context is everything, eh?

Let us not neglect RATE calculations, especially if we're going to get picky (nothing wrong with that)? I forgot to mention unit/time, and thanks to Merran for correcting my oversight.

I hope someone will clear up the confusion about how "selection hasn't allowed plants to create the same biomass with less water" as Merran also points out. Any if it has, which plants they are and how much more efficient they are in producing more units of biomass IN LESS TIME OR THE SAME TIME as less efficient non-drought-tolerant plants.

WT

----- Original Message ----- From: "Merran" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2011 8:16 PM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Plant Physiology Drought tolerance Re: [ECOLOG-L] course and symposium on plant breeding for drought tolerance


Isn't drought tolerance defined by a plant's water use efficiency?  C4
plants have the ability to fix 2 or 3 times more carbon with the same
amount of water not because they use less water in photosynthesis, but
because they limit photorespiration and the amount of water lost through
their stomatas.  So they do fix more more carbon with less water, but
unless the climatic conditions are perfect I don't think the advantage is
really that great.  I'm fairly sure that the tropics have a greater
abundance of C4 plants than the American deserts, and saltbushes (C4,
right?) are not usually that much larger than sagebrushes..  There must be
other limiting factors.

It's my understanding as well that CAM photosynthesis is not the same as C4
photosynthesis -- I've read that it is a different, even more
efficient process. It occurs in desert succulents and allows the plants to
open their stomatas only at night, thus losing far less water to
transpiration.  The CO2 is stored as an acid and metabolised the next day.
These plants can breath in up to 40 times more Carbon dioxide than C3
plants with the same water loss.
However efficient these plants are, they are also very slow-growing
-- something that I have never fully understood.  I think that there's a
low limit to their acid-storing capabilities.  So they lose less water in
exchange for performing less photosynthesis each day, but are still
creating the same biomass with less water?  A saguaro is bigger than a
sagebrush, but it took longer for it to get that way?  I'm guessing that
this will not be the technique they are teaching at the CSU symposium.

If I've got any of this wrong, some one please let me know.

Surely there must be ways to raise a plant's water use efficiency aside
from changing the photosynthetic process.  I mean, I just spent my morning
picking out which variety of Buffalo Grass to replant my Kentucky Bluegrass
lawn with.  How about making the plant hairier?  Give it a smaller leaf
size and orient the leaves directly upwards.  Make the leaves waxy
with stomatas that don't open fully.  Give it stem pleats (such as in
cacti) that create shade.  But it's my understanding that many of these
adaptations also limit CO2 intake and therefore biomass production.  I
don't know if these adaptations will actually let you breathe in more CO2
for the amount of water lost in transpiration.  Anyone?

Maybe I'm completely off base but it seems confusing to me to suggest that
selection hasn't allowed plants to create the same biomass with less
water.  Thank you for this conversation -- writing this email really made
me think.

Merran


-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1415 / Virus Database: 2108/4092 - Release Date: 12/20/11

Reply via email to