Title of article :
Why Do Toothed Leaves Correlate with Cold Climates? Gas Exchange at Leaf Margins Provides New Insights into a Classic Paleotemperature Proxy
Author/Authors :
Dana L. Royer and Peter Wilf، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Leaf teeth are conspicuous and often diagnostic features of many plant species. In mesic environments with
sufficient nutrient resources, the percentage of toothed species in extant floras generally correlates negatively
with temperature; consequently, fossil leaf teeth are widely used to estimate continental paleotemperatures.
However, the function of leaf teeth with respect to climate is poorly understood. Here, we test the hypothesis
that teeth enhance rates of carbon uptake at the beginning of the growing season when temperatures are
limiting. We measure the seasonal patterns of leaf-margin photosynthesis and transpiration for 60 woody
species from two temperate regions with differing climates (Pennsylvania and North Carolina). Three significant
results are, first, physiological activity at leaf margins is greatest early in the growing season (first 30 d);
second, toothed margins are more active with respect to photosynthesis and transpiration than untoothed margins;
finally, leaf margins are more active in species native to colder Pennsylvania. The toothed species increase
transpiration and photosynthate production early in the growing season relative to untoothed species and do
so more in the Pennsylvania sample, maximizing carbon gain when temperature is limiting but moisture and
nutrient availability are not. This mechanism may provide a proportionally increasing selective advantage to
toothed species with decreasing temperature that is reflected in empirical correlations used for paleotemperature
estimation.
Keywords :
Transpiration , functional ecology , leaf teeth , photosynthesis , paleoclimate , leaf-margin analysis
Journal title :
International Journal of Plant Sciences
Journal title :
International Journal of Plant Sciences