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  5. C4 maize and sorghum are more sensitive to rapid dehydration than C3 wheat and sunflower
 
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C4 maize and sorghum are more sensitive to rapid dehydration than C3 wheat and sunflower

Author(s)
Bellasio, Chandra  
Stuart-Williams, Hilary  
Farquhar, Graham D.  
Flexas, Jaume  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/27118
Date Issued
2023-12
Date Available
2024-11-15T15:29:14Z
Abstract
The high productive potential, heat resilience, and greater water use efficiency of C4 over C3 plants attract considerable interest in the face of global warming and increasing population, but C4 plants are often sensitive to dehydration, questioning the feasibility of their wider adoption. To resolve the primary effect of dehydration from slower from secondary leaf responses originating within leaves to combat stress, we conducted an innovative dehydration experiment. Four crops grown in hydroponics were forced to a rapid yet controlled decrease in leaf water potential by progressively raising roots of out of the solution while measuring leaf gas exchange. We show that, under rapid dehydration, assimilation decreased more steeply in C4 maize and sorghum than in C3 wheat and sunflower. This reduction was due to a rise of nonstomatal limitation at triple the rate in maize and sorghum than in wheat and sunflower. Rapid reductions in assimilation were previously measured in numerous C4 species across both laboratory and natural conditions. Hence, we deduce that high sensitivity to rapid dehydration might stem from the disturbance of an intrinsic aspect of C4 bicellular photosynthesis. We posit that an obstruction to metabolite transport between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells could be the cause.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Science Foundation Ireland
Other Sponsorship
Australian National University
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
New Phytologist
Volume
240
Issue
6
Start Page
2239
End Page
2252
Copyright (Published Version)
2023 New Phytologist Foundation
Subjects

Dehydration

Drought

Nonstomatal limitatio...

Photosynthesis

Stress

Turgor

DOI
10.1111/nph.19299
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0028-646X
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
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Owning collection
Biology & Environmental Science Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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