Friday, August 8, 2008

PS 84-131: Stomatal conductance responses to changing vapor pressure deficit: Do daytime patterns of regulation apply at night?

Ava R. Howard, Lisa A. Donovan, and Marc van Iersel. University of Georgia

Background/Question/Methods Substantial nighttime conductance (g) has recently been discovered in a broad range of C3 plant species. However, little is known about its regulation. Experimental manipulations of leaf-to-air vapor pressure deficit (VPDleaf) have established a clear pattern of stomatal responses during the day, but nighttime responses have been largely inferred from correlative field data. We provide one of the first comparisons of daytime and nighttime g responses to VPDleaf using experimental manipulations that eliminate potential confounding effects.

Results/Conclusions Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme and Populus balsamifera spp. trichocarpa had substantial nighttime g (~ 0.2 mol m-2 s-1 at 0.5 kPa VPDleaf) and nighttime g did decrease as VPDleaf was increased to 2.5 kPa. For S. lycopersicum the nighttime sensitivity of g to VPDleaf (assessed as slope/intercept) was substantially lower than daytime sensitivity. In contrast, P. balsamifera nighttime and daytime sensitivity to VPDleaf were similar. We are currently testing additional environmental conditions and species to see if a general pattern emerges. Our data thus far support the conclusions that nighttime g does decline with increasing VPDleaf, but that species may differ in whether the nighttime sensitivity is lower than that of daytime.