Soluble sugar drives plant leaf turgor, restricts plant growth, and
regulates plant hydraulic capacity of Haloxylon ammodendron to different
groundwater level
Abstract
Anthropogenic withdraw of groundwater and climatic drought results in
the decline of groundwater depth that, in turn, severely limits the
water availability for phreatophytic vegetation in arid regions. In this
study, a small xeric, phreatophytic tree Haloxylon ammodendron (C.A.
Mey.) was investigated to understand the influence of depth to
groundwater (DGW) on hydraulic traits and on the trade-off between
drought tolerance and leaf area increment. A suite of traits including
leaf water potential, pressure–volume (P–V) curves, Huber value,
assimilation branch growth, and osmotic regulation substance were
measured across five sites with DGW ranges from 3.45 to 15.91 m. Our
results indicate that H. ammodendron was subject to greater water stress
with increasing DGW, as indicated by decreased predawn (Ψpd) & midday
(Ψmd) branch water potential. We also found that growth rate declined as
Huber value increased with increasing DGW in the early growing season
(EGS). Solute sugar, as a major osmotic substance, drives decreases in
osmotic potential at full turgor, and thus constrains assimilation
branch growth with increasing DGW in EGS. Therefore, osmotic adjustment
accompanied with water potential regulation (Ψpd-Ψmd) and plasticity of
Huber value allows this phreatophyte to absorb water from deeper soil
layers and tolerate drought. However, these adaptive adjustments cannot
fully compensate for nonoptimal water conditions as growth rate
continued to decrease as DGW increased in EGS and even became negative
in the late growing season (LGS) at almost all sites. Our results
provide an insight into how H. ammodendron responds and adapts to
changes DGW in a region experiencing hydrological and climatic drought.
Greater depth of groundwater had a significant effect on H. ammodendron
and may have similar effects for other non-riparian phreatophytic plants
in arid regions.