Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Why trees aren’t taller


The effect of height-induced drought stress on redwood foliage. From Koch et al. 1994.

The tallest tree in the world is about 120 m. One of the most basic questions we have about trees is whether this height represents the tallest possible tree. Are there some fundamental physical constraints that make growing much beyond this height impossible? Or could we grow a 200 m tree?

In 1997, Ryan and Yoder wrote a Bioscience article “Hydraulic limits to tree height and tree growth”. There, they reviewed 4 hypotheses regarding the limits to tree height. In short, they ruled out that as trees get taller their respiration might become too high, nutrients too hard to acquire, or genetic changes associated with maturation (they get too old) limits their growth. These might come into play, but are only contributing factors.

The hypothesis that was left was hydraulic limitation—it’s just too hard to move water much higher. Here, as trees grow taller, the length of xylem from root to leaf increases. Water flow is a function of the ratio of the difference of water potential and resistance. As tree height increases, resistance to water flow increases requiring lower (more negative) water potentials to move water to the top of the tree. As water potentials decline, xylem at the top of the tree is closer to the point of cavitation. Once the string of water snaps at the top of the tree, it’s hard to get water back up there and that part is dead. To be safe, leaves at the top of the tree close their stomata more frequently, which limits carbon gain. Less photosynthesis slows growth, generating a maximum height.

The evidence at the time for this hypothesis was that stomata in any leaf will close if hydraulic resistance increases, hydraulic resistance increases for older trees, and photosynthesis is reduced in older, taller trees.

They end the 1997 review by saying “we may be close to answering some of our oldest questions about tree height.”

Move forward to 2004. Koch et al. studied the tallest tree known on earth, a 113 m redwood in N California. They showed that as one moved progressively up the tree, water potentials declined, photosynthesis declined, and leaf WUE increased as stomates were closed more frequently. Everything fit the hydraulic limitation model.

Yet, when you go to the top of a redwood tree, the water potentials aren’t that low. It only takes 1 MPa to overcome gravity and move water 100 m. Moving water to the top of the redwood tree takes only -2 MPa due to greater resistance in redwood wood. They argue that at this water potential, photosynthesis is essentially zero for the redwoods, which explains why redwoods aren’t much taller.

But it doesn’t explain why other trees that can photosynthesize at tensions below -2 MPa couldn’t build a taller tree.

Subsequent work seems to reinforce this idea. In 2008, Domec et al. assessed xylem design for 85-m tall Douglas fir trees. There, they showed that with increasing height, Doug fir branches had greater resistance to water movement (less efficient) but could with stand greater tensions (more safety). But still, the water potentials at the top of the theoretically tallest Douglas fir (~130 m) did not push the ultimate bounds for plants.

The authors concluded “Mechanisms governing ultimate tree height must be considered in an evolutionary context, and so it is unlikely that the tradeoffs discussed here are identical to those of all other species. A number of coniferous species adapted to arid and semiarid zones can maintain adequate water transport at substantially greater xylem tensions than those normally experienced by the mesic-environment species Douglas-fir and coast redwood.”

Ultimately, the question of tall trees becomes an evolutionary question. Could nature build a 200-m tree? The current limits to tree height might be evolutionary, not physical. If you built a tree with the same plumbing as a drought-tolerant shrub, a 200-m tree might be possible. 


Domec, J. C., B. Lachenbruch, F. C. Meinzer, D. R. Woodruff, J. M. Warren, and K. A. McCulloh. 2008. Maximum height in a conifer is associated with conflicting requirements for xylem design. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105:12069-12074.
Koch, G. W., S. C. Sillett, G. M. Jennings, and S. D. Davis. 2004. The limits to tree height. Nature 428:851-854.
Ryan, M. G. and B. J. Yoder. 1997. Hydraulic limits to tree height and tree growth. Bioscience 47:235-242.

Friday, October 14, 2011

A lack of fertilization from elevated CO2 in forests


The concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has been rising steady for some time now. There are two main potential direct effects of this fertilization. The first is a direct increase in photosynthesis, the second a reduced use of water.

At its simplest, the reduced use of water should increase plant production in drier habitats by increasing soil water availability. Less water is used by plants for a given amount of photosynthesis, means more water in the soil, and more productivity before soils dry out.

Theoretically this straightforward, but whether this has happened in ecosystems across the Earth or not is an open question.

Peñuelas, Canadell, and Ogaya synthesized data on two parameters for 47 forests across the world. The first was the C isotope composition of tree rings, which can be used to infer instantaneous water use efficiency. The second was the growth rate of trees themselves--limiting measurements to well-established forests.

Their results are pretty clear. Across a wide range of forests, over the past 40 years trees have been 20% more efficient with water when they photosynthesize.

If trees are primarily limited by water, they should be producing 20% more wood. Yet, there was no significant increase in productivity in tree growth in any region.

If plants are more efficient with water, then what could be holding back plants?


The authors write, "Other factors such as increasing temperature, drought, nutrient limitation and/or plant acclimation may preclude such growth increase."

Which might it be?

The next chapter in this question is going to be pretty interesting.


Peñuelas, J., J. G. Canadell, and R. Ogaya. 2011. Increased water-use efficiency during the 20th century did not translate into enhanced tree growth. Global Ecology and Biogeography 20:597-608.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Low resource tolerance traits


General approach for determining physiological drought tolerance. Individual leaves or plants are dried down over time. Periodically the water potential of the soil or leaves, relative water content (RWC) or wilting stage of the plants is assessed. The response variable is generally gas exchange (stomatal conductance or photosynthesis) or hydraulic conductivity of leaves or stems. Different thresholds of the response variable are used as the ultimate metric  for physiological drought tolerance, i.e. A = 0 or KL = 20% of KLmax.


A short note here.

One of the developing trends in functional traits is moving away from traits associated with general stress tolerance syndromes to traits that directly are associated with tolerances of low availability of specific resources.

There has been a lot of work to determine the leaf economic spectrum, for example. Yet, the LES separates fast- and slow-growing species in essence without separating the specific resources that have driven the evolution of the slow-growing species.

For example, drought, shade, and low nutrient availability are all supposed to be associated with the traits on slow-return portion of the LES. Therefore, at its best, the LES would not separate out whether species were adapted to drought or shade, if they aren't adapted to both.

A hopeful trend has been measuring drought-tolerance or shade-tolerance directly. Tolerance of low nutrient availability/competitive ability when nutrients are limiting, not so much, but that might change yet.

Mel Tyree and Tom Kursar's work for tropical species is a good example. Their approach is to let tropical tree seedlings grown in pots wilt and then measure the water potential of plants that are severely wilted. Similar to psi-crit that I've measured.



When you do that, you get a range of drought tolerances:


They've used this pretty successfully to explain patterns of diversity in dry and wet tropical forests.

Again, this is a hopeful trend that should bear fruit in the near future.


Engelbrecht, B. M., L. S. Comita, R. Condit, T. A. Kursar, M. T. Tyree, B. L. Turner, and S. P. Hubbell. 2007. Drought sensitivity shapes species distribution patterns in tropical forests. Nature 447:80-82.
Kursar, T. A., B. M. J. Engelbrecht, A. Burke, M. T. Tyree, B. Ei Omari, and J. P. Giraldo. 2009. Tolerance to low leaf water status of tropical tree seedlings is related to drought performance and distribution. Functional Ecology 23:93-102.
Tyree, M. T. 2003. Desiccation Tolerance of Five Tropical Seedlings in Panama. Relationship to a Field Assessment of Drought Performance. Plant Physiology 132:1439-1447.