Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

Ecophysiological adaptations shape distributions of closely related trees along a climatic moisture gradient

  • Duncan D. Smith,
  • Mark A. Adams,
  • Amanda M. Salvi,
  • Christopher P. Krieg,
  • Cécile Ané,
  • Katherine A. McCulloh,
  • Thomas J. Givnish

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42352-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Tradeoffs between the energetic benefits and costs of traits can shape species and trait distributions along environmental gradients. Here we test predictions based on such tradeoffs using survival, growth, and 50 photosynthetic, hydraulic, and allocational traits of ten Eucalyptus species grown in four common gardens along an 8-fold gradient in precipitation/pan evaporation (P/E p ) in Victoria, Australia. Phylogenetically structured tests show that most trait-environment relationships accord qualitatively with theory. Most traits appear adaptive across species within gardens (indicating fixed genetic differences) and within species across gardens (indicating plasticity). However, species from moister climates have lower stomatal conductance than others grown under the same conditions. Responses in stomatal conductance and five related traits appear to reflect greater mesophyll photosynthetic sensitivity of mesic species to lower leaf water potential. Our data support adaptive cross-over, with realized height growth of most species exceeding that of others in climates they dominate. Our findings show that pervasive physiological, hydraulic, and allocational adaptations shape the distributions of dominant Eucalyptus species along a subcontinental climatic moisture gradient, driven by rapid divergence in species P/E p and associated adaptations.