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Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves: A theoretical study

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Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves: A theoretical study. / Srivastava, Antriksh; Srinivasan, Venkatraman; Long, Stephen P.
In: Plant, Cell and Environment, 02.02.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Srivastava, A., Srinivasan, V., & Long, S. P. (2024). Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves: A theoretical study. Plant, Cell and Environment. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.14821

Vancouver

Srivastava A, Srinivasan V, Long SP. Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves: A theoretical study. Plant, Cell and Environment. 2024 Feb 2. Epub 2024 Feb 2. doi: 10.1111/pce.14821

Author

Srivastava, Antriksh ; Srinivasan, Venkatraman ; Long, Stephen P. / Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves : A theoretical study. In: Plant, Cell and Environment. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{d2663a3291d44fee9c882418ea5aded3,
title = "Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves: A theoretical study",
abstract = "As the leading global grain crop, maize significantly impacts agricultural water usage. Presently, photosynthesis () in leaves of modern maize crops is saturated with , implying that reducing stomatal conductance () would not affect but reduce transpiration (), thereby increasing water use efficiency (WUE). While reduction benefits upper canopy leaves under optimal conditions, the tradeoffs in low light and nitrogen‐deficient leaves under nonoptimal microenvironments remain unexplored. Moreover, reduction increases leaf temperature () and water vapor pressure deficit, partially counteracting transpiratory water savings. Therefore, the overall impact of reduction on water savings remains unclear. Here, we use a process‐based leaf model to investigate the benefits of reduced in maize leaves under different microenvironments. Our findings show that increases in due to reduction can diminish WUE gains by up to 20%. However, reduction still results in beneficial WUE tradeoffs, where a 29% decrease in in upper canopy leaves results in a 28% WUE gain without loss in . Lower canopy leaves exhibit superior tradeoffs in reduction with 178% gains in WUE without loss in . Our simulations show that these WUE benefits are resilient to climate change.",
keywords = "Plant Science, Physiology",
author = "Antriksh Srivastava and Venkatraman Srinivasan and Long, {Stephen P.}",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1111/pce.14821",
language = "English",
journal = "Plant, Cell and Environment",
issn = "0140-7791",
publisher = "Wiley",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stomatal conductance reduction tradeoffs in maize leaves

T2 - A theoretical study

AU - Srivastava, Antriksh

AU - Srinivasan, Venkatraman

AU - Long, Stephen P.

PY - 2024/2/2

Y1 - 2024/2/2

N2 - As the leading global grain crop, maize significantly impacts agricultural water usage. Presently, photosynthesis () in leaves of modern maize crops is saturated with , implying that reducing stomatal conductance () would not affect but reduce transpiration (), thereby increasing water use efficiency (WUE). While reduction benefits upper canopy leaves under optimal conditions, the tradeoffs in low light and nitrogen‐deficient leaves under nonoptimal microenvironments remain unexplored. Moreover, reduction increases leaf temperature () and water vapor pressure deficit, partially counteracting transpiratory water savings. Therefore, the overall impact of reduction on water savings remains unclear. Here, we use a process‐based leaf model to investigate the benefits of reduced in maize leaves under different microenvironments. Our findings show that increases in due to reduction can diminish WUE gains by up to 20%. However, reduction still results in beneficial WUE tradeoffs, where a 29% decrease in in upper canopy leaves results in a 28% WUE gain without loss in . Lower canopy leaves exhibit superior tradeoffs in reduction with 178% gains in WUE without loss in . Our simulations show that these WUE benefits are resilient to climate change.

AB - As the leading global grain crop, maize significantly impacts agricultural water usage. Presently, photosynthesis () in leaves of modern maize crops is saturated with , implying that reducing stomatal conductance () would not affect but reduce transpiration (), thereby increasing water use efficiency (WUE). While reduction benefits upper canopy leaves under optimal conditions, the tradeoffs in low light and nitrogen‐deficient leaves under nonoptimal microenvironments remain unexplored. Moreover, reduction increases leaf temperature () and water vapor pressure deficit, partially counteracting transpiratory water savings. Therefore, the overall impact of reduction on water savings remains unclear. Here, we use a process‐based leaf model to investigate the benefits of reduced in maize leaves under different microenvironments. Our findings show that increases in due to reduction can diminish WUE gains by up to 20%. However, reduction still results in beneficial WUE tradeoffs, where a 29% decrease in in upper canopy leaves results in a 28% WUE gain without loss in . Lower canopy leaves exhibit superior tradeoffs in reduction with 178% gains in WUE without loss in . Our simulations show that these WUE benefits are resilient to climate change.

KW - Plant Science

KW - Physiology

U2 - 10.1111/pce.14821

DO - 10.1111/pce.14821

M3 - Journal article

JO - Plant, Cell and Environment

JF - Plant, Cell and Environment

SN - 0140-7791

ER -