Frontiers in Plant Science (Jul 2022)

Plant Evolution History Overwhelms Current Environment Gradients in Affecting Leaf Chlorophyll Across the Tibetan Plateau

  • Yicheng He,
  • Yicheng He,
  • Tingting Li,
  • Ruiyang Zhang,
  • Jinsong Wang,
  • Juntao Zhu,
  • Yang Li,
  • Xinli Chen,
  • Junxiao Pan,
  • Ying Shen,
  • Ying Shen,
  • Furong Wang,
  • Jingwen Li,
  • Dashuan Tian,
  • Dashuan Tian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.941983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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AimsLeaf chlorophyll (Chl) is a fundamental component and good proxy for plant photosynthesis. However, we know little about the large-scale patterns of leaf Chl and the relative roles of current environment changes vs. plant evolution in driving leaf Chl variations.LocationsThe east to west grassland transect of the Tibetan Plateau.MethodsWe performed a grassland transect over 1,600 km across the Tibetan Plateau, measuring leaf Chl among 677 site-species.ResultsLeaf Chl showed a significantly spatial pattern across the grasslands in the Tibetan Plateau, decreasing with latitude but increasing with longitude. Along with environmental gradient, leaf Chl decreased with photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), but increased with water availability and soil nitrogen availability. Furthermore, leaf Chl also showed significant differences among functional groups (C4 > C3 species; legumes < non-legume species), but no difference between annual and perennial species. However, we surprisingly found that plant evolution played a dominant role in shaping leaf Chl variations when comparing the sum and individual effects of all the environmental factors above. Moreover, we revealed that leaf Chl non-linearly decreased with plant evolutionary divergence time. This well-matches the non-linearly increasing trend in PAR or decreasing trend in temperature during the geological time-scale uplift of the Tibetan Plateau.Main ConclusionThis study highlights the dominant role of plant evolution in determining leaf Chl variations across the Tibetan Plateau. Given the fundamental role of Chl for photosynthesis, these results provide new insights into reconsidering photosynthesis capacity in alpine plants and the carbon cycle in an evolutionary view.

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