18 O enrichment of sucrose and photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic
leaf water in a C 3 grass -- atmospheric drivers and physiological
relations
Abstract
The 18O enrichment (Δ 18O) of leaf
water affects the Δ 18O of photosynthetic products
such as sucrose, generating an isotopic archive of plant function and
past climate. However, uncertainty remains regarding how leaf water
compartmentation between photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic tissue
affects the relationship between Δ 18O of bulk leaf
water (Δ 18O LW) and leaf sucrose (Δ
18O Sucrose). We grew Lolium
perenne (a C 3 grass) in mesocosm-scale, replicated
experiments with daytime relative humidity (RH 50 or 75%) and CO
2 level (200, 400 or 800 μmol mol -1)
as factors, and determined Δ 18O LW, Δ
18O Sucrose and morpho-physiological
leaf parameters, including transpiration ( E
leaf), stomatal conductance ( g
s) and mesophyll conductance to CO 2 (
g m). The Δ 18O of
photosynthetic medium water (Δ 18O
SSW) was estimated from Δ 18O
Sucrose and the equilibrium fractionation between water
and carbonyl groups (ε bio). Δ 18O
SSW was well predicted by theoretical estimates of leaf
water at the evaporative site (Δ 18O
e) with adjustments that correlated with gas exchange
parameters ( g s or total conductance to CO
2). Isotopic mass balance and published work indicated
that non-photosynthetic tissue water was a large fraction
(~0.53) of bulk leaf water. Δ 18O
LW was a poor proxy for Δ 18O
Sucrose, mainly due to opposite Δ 18O
responses of non-photosynthetic tissue water (Δ 18O
non-SSW) relative to Δ 18O
SSW, driven by atmospheric conditions.