Forests (Feb 2024)

Physiological Responses and Ecological Benefits of Water Uptake by <i>Populus euphratica</i> Leaves in Arid Areas

  • Junhao Tian,
  • Zhoukang Li,
  • Huimin Wang,
  • Guanghui Lv,
  • Wusong Li,
  • Huifang Wang,
  • Yuchen Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f15030430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. 430

Abstract

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The absorption of atmospheric water by plants through their leaves, known as leaf water uptake, plays a crucial role in sustaining plant growth and survival in arid regions. Condensate is one of the important sources of water for plants in arid zones and plays an important role in alleviating the physiological state of plant water. In order to clarify the ecological role of the leaf absorption of condensation water, we took the dominant species of the desert Dugay forest plant, Populus euphratica, as the research object, and based on in situ leaf humidification field experiments, we comprehensively analyzed the effect of condensation water on the physiological state of P. euphratica and the ecological benefit of leaf water absorption on the arid zone by determining the parameters of the physiological indexes of the leaf, the leaf wettability, and the water-absorbing capacity of the leaf. The results showed that P. euphratica leaves have a water-absorbing ability on both sides, and under the condensation water treatment, the water potential of dawn leaves in the TR group (−1.75 ± 0.12 MPa) was significantly higher than that in the CK group (−1.41 ± 0.13 Mpa); the net photosynthetic rate of leaves in the TR group (13.08 ± 0.68 μmol·m−2·s−1) was significantly higher than that in the CK group (10.42 ± 0.57 μmol·m−2·s−1); the proline content of the TR group (22.82 ± 0.8 μg·g−1) was significantly lower than that of the CK group (68.67 ± 6.14 μg·g−1); and the leaf photosynthetic capacity, leaf osmotic adjustment, and stress tolerance affected by condensation water were significantly different (p P. euphratica leaves accounts for 10.92% of the maximum transpiration rate (Tr); in 2022, the total summer leaf surface water uptake by P. euphratica was about 220.5 mol, a value that represents about 0.25% of the average annual evapotranspiration from Ebinur Lake. This study helps to improve the understanding of the impact of condensation water on the physiological ecology of the desert plant P. euphratica and provides a scientific basis for the ecological benefits of leaf water absorption in arid regions.

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