Forests (Nov 2020)

Counter-Intuitive Response to Water Limitation in a Southern European Provenance of <i>Frangula alnus</i> Mill. in a Common Garden Experiment

  • Kristine Vander Mijnsbrugge,
  • Lise De Clerck,
  • Nele Van der Schueren,
  • Stefaan Moreels,
  • Amy Lauwers,
  • Kathy Steppe,
  • Liselotte De Ligne,
  • Matteo Campioli,
  • Jan Van den Bulcke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f11111186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. 1186

Abstract

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Climate change will intensify drought periods during the growing season in Western Europe. We mimicked this prediction by withholding water in summer from young rooted cuttings of Frangula alnus Mill., a common shrub species, originating from different latitudes in Europe (Italy, Belgium and Sweden) and growing in a common garden environment in Belgium. We followed the responses to the drought up to two years after the treatment. Counter-intuitively, the Italian provenance displayed earlier symptoms and stronger effects of water limitation than the other two provenances. A putative higher transpiration in this provenance could be suggested based on a relative larger shoot growth, larger leaves and a higher stomatal density. After the post-drought re-watering, the droughted plants of the Italian provenance entered leaf senescence later than the control plants, likely as a compensation mechanism for the lost growing time. Bud burst in the first year after the drought treatment and leaf senescence in the next autumn were both advanced in the drought treated group when compared with the control plants. Bud burst in the second year after the drought treatment did not display any differentiation anymore between control and drought treated plants. Growth traits also displayed legacies of the water limitation. For example, the drought treated plants showed a lower number of reshoots upon pruning in the year after the drought treatment. Our results suggest that assisted migration from southern Europe to western Europe as a climate change adaptation strategy might not always follow the expected patterns.

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