J Plant Ecol ›› 2013, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (6): 437-447 .DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtt003

• Research Articles •     Next Articles

Global patterns of the responses of leaf-level photosynthesis and respiration in terrestrial plants to experimental warming

Junyi Liang1,2, Jianyang Xia1, Lingli Liu1 and Shiqiang Wan1,3,*   

  1. 1 State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xiangshan, Beijing 100093, China; 2 University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yuquanlu, Beijing 100049, China; 3 State Key laboratory of Cotton Biology, Key Laboratory of Plant Stress Biology, College of Life Sciences, Henan University, Kaifeng, Henan 475004, China
  • Received:2012-05-10 Accepted:2013-01-05 Published:2013-11-21
  • Contact: Wan, Shiqiang

Global patterns of the responses of leaf-level photosynthesis and respiration in terrestrial plants to experimental warming

Abstract: Aims The balance between leaf photosynthesis and respiration of terrestrial plants determines the net carbon (C) gain by vegetation and consequently is important to climate–C cycle feedback. This study is to reveal the global patterns of the responses of leaf-level net photosynthesis and dark respiration to elevated temperature.
Methods Data for leaf-level net photosynthesis rate (P n) and dark respiration rate (R d) in natural terrestrial plant species with standard deviation (or standard error or confidence interval) and sample size were collected from searched literatures on Web of Science. Then a meta-analysis was conducted to estimate the effects of experimental warming on leaf-level P n and R d of terrestrial plants.
Important findings Across all the plants included in the analysis, warming enhanced P n and R d significantly by 6.13 and 33.14%, respectively. However, the responses were plant functional type (PFT) specific. Specifically, photosynthesis of C4 herbs responded to experimental warming positively but that of C3 herbs did not, whereas their respiratory responses were similar, suggesting C4 plants would benefit more from warming. The photosynthetic response declined linearly with increasing ambient temperature. The respiratory responses linearly enhanced with the increase in warming magnitude. In addition, a thermal acclimation of R d, instead of P n, was observed. Although greater proportion of fixed C was consumed (greater R d / P n ratio), warming significantly enhanced the daily net C balance at the leaf level. This provides an important mechanism for the positive responses of plant biomass and net primary productivity to warming. Overall, the findings, including the contrastive responses of different PFTs and the enhancement in daily leaf net C balance, are important for improving model projection of the climate–C cycle feedback.

Key words: acclimation, meta-analysis, plant functional type, photosynthesis, respiration

摘要:
Aims The balance between leaf photosynthesis and respiration of terrestrial plants determines the net carbon (C) gain by vegetation and consequently is important to climate–C cycle feedback. This study is to reveal the global patterns of the responses of leaf-level net photosynthesis and dark respiration to elevated temperature.
Methods Data for leaf-level net photosynthesis rate (P n) and dark respiration rate (R d) in natural terrestrial plant species with standard deviation (or standard error or confidence interval) and sample size were collected from searched literatures on Web of Science. Then a meta-analysis was conducted to estimate the effects of experimental warming on leaf-level P n and R d of terrestrial plants.
Important findings Across all the plants included in the analysis, warming enhanced P n and R d significantly by 6.13 and 33.14%, respectively. However, the responses were plant functional type (PFT) specific. Specifically, photosynthesis of C4 herbs responded to experimental warming positively but that of C3 herbs did not, whereas their respiratory responses were similar, suggesting C4 plants would benefit more from warming. The photosynthetic response declined linearly with increasing ambient temperature. The respiratory responses linearly enhanced with the increase in warming magnitude. In addition, a thermal acclimation of R d, instead of P n, was observed. Although greater proportion of fixed C was consumed (greater R d / P n ratio), warming significantly enhanced the daily net C balance at the leaf level. This provides an important mechanism for the positive responses of plant biomass and net primary productivity to warming. Overall, the findings, including the contrastive responses of different PFTs and the enhancement in daily leaf net C balance, are important for improving model projection of the climate–C cycle feedback.