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A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought

Publication ,  Journal Article
Mrad, A; Sevanto, S; Domec, JC; Liu, Y; Nakad, M; Katul, G
Published in: Frontiers in Forests and Global Change
August 28, 2019

Optimality principles that underlie models of stomatal kinetics require identifying and formulating the gain and the costs involved in opening stomata. While the gain has been linked to larger carbon acquisition, there is still a debate as to the costs that limit stomatal opening. This work presents an Euler-Lagrange framework that accommodates water use strategy and various costs through the formulation of constraints. The reduction in plant hydraulic conductance due to cavitation is added as a new constraint above and beyond the soil hydrological balance and is analyzed for three different types of whole-plant vulnerability curves. Model results show that differences in vulnerability curves alone lead to relatively iso- and aniso-hydric stomatal behavior. Moreover, this framework explains how the presence of competition (biotic or abiotic) for water alters stomatal response to declining soil water content. This contribution corroborates previous research that predicts that a plant's environment (e.g., competition, soil processes) significantly affects its response to drought and supplies the required mathematical machinery to represent this complexity. The method adopted here disentangles cause and effect of the opening and closure of stomata and complements recent mechanistic models of stomatal response to drought.

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Published In

Frontiers in Forests and Global Change

DOI

EISSN

2624-893X

Publication Date

August 28, 2019

Volume

2

Related Subject Headings

  • 3007 Forestry sciences
 

Citation

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Mrad, A., Sevanto, S., Domec, J. C., Liu, Y., Nakad, M., & Katul, G. (2019). A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 2. https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2019.00049
Mrad, A., S. Sevanto, J. C. Domec, Y. Liu, M. Nakad, and G. Katul. “A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought.” Frontiers in Forests and Global Change 2 (August 28, 2019). https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2019.00049.
Mrad A, Sevanto S, Domec JC, Liu Y, Nakad M, Katul G. A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change. 2019 Aug 28;2.
Mrad, A., et al. “A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought.” Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, vol. 2, Aug. 2019. Scopus, doi:10.3389/ffgc.2019.00049.
Mrad A, Sevanto S, Domec JC, Liu Y, Nakad M, Katul G. A Dynamic Optimality Principle for Water Use Strategies Explains Isohydric to Anisohydric Plant Responses to Drought. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change. 2019 Aug 28;2.

Published In

Frontiers in Forests and Global Change

DOI

EISSN

2624-893X

Publication Date

August 28, 2019

Volume

2

Related Subject Headings

  • 3007 Forestry sciences