PS 81-212
Hyper-efficient water transport enables the high photosynthetic performance of C4 grasses

Friday, August 15, 2014
Exhibit Hall, Sacramento Convention Center
Lawren Sack, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
Jessica Pasquet-Kok, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
Sam Taylor, Bowdoin College
Christine Scoffoni, Department of Biological Sciences, California State University, Los Angeles, CA
Pascal-Antoine Christin, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Andrew Diener, Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, UCLA, Los Angeles
Erika J. Edwards, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI
Colin P. Osborne, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Background/Question/Methods

Grasses dominate ≈40% of the Earth’s land surface, accounting for > 25% of terrestrial primary productivity, largely due to the abundance of species using C4 photosynthesis. The C4 photosynthesis syndrome is defined by a CO2 concentrating mechanism and associated specialized leaf anatomy that drive high photosynthetic rate and water use efficiency especially under high temperatures or low CO2 . C4 is thus a model for the repeated evolution of a suite of traits that are of tremendous ecological importance. In experiments and comparative analyses on 28 grass species we determined for the first time the differences in hydraulic design between C3 and C4 grasses, and its relationships with stomatal conductance, photosynthetic rate, vein and mesophyll anatomy and climate of origin.

Results/Conclusions

C4 grasses possess a specialized leaf hydraulic design. For C3 grasses, as shown previously across diverse C3 species, the leaf hydraulic conductance (Kleaf) was proportional to stomatal conductance (gs). By contrast, for C4 grasses, Kleaf was disproportionately high, independently of gs. The high Kleaf/gs for C4 grasses was related to differences in leaf cell, tissue, vein and xylem traits. Physiological modeling showed that high Kleaf/gs is critical to the success of C4 grasses; without it, stomatal closure during typical transpiration would eliminate their photosynthetic advantage. Thus,  this “hyper-efficient” water transport as important an adaptation as C4 biochemistry, enabling the photosynthetic advantage of C4 over C3 grasses both in moist soil and moderate drought. This integrated hydraulic-photosynthetic syndrome in C4 grasses allows them to perform competitively under moist and drying conditions, and further explains the decoupling of photosynthetic gas exchange from mean annual rainfall for C4 grasses across native ranges. These findings also support the expectation of a C4 advantage in drying climates under rising CO2 concentrations and temperatures.