The Impact of Seasonal Phenology on Photosynthetic Water Use Efficiency:
an Evaluation of Patterns and Drivers in Temperate Deciduous Forests
Abstract
Vegetation acts as a critical link between the geosphere, biosphere, and
atmosphere, regulating the flux of water to the atmosphere via
transpiration (E) and the input of carbon from the atmosphere to plants
and soil via photosynthetic carbon assimilation (A). The rate of A is
known to be seasonally dynamic, however, few studies have investigated
how the ratio between E and A, known as the water use efficiency (WUE),
changes with phenology. WUE directly impacts regional to global carbon
and water cycles and lack of knowledge regarding the dynamics of WUE
remains among the largest uncertainties in current earth system model
(ESM) projections of carbon and water exchange in temperate forests.
Here we attempt to reduce this knowledge gap by studying these dynamics
across a range of eight deciduous tree species common to temperate
forests of North America. Using gas exchange and spectroscopic
measurements, we investigated seasonal patterns in leaf level
physiological, biochemical, and anatomical properties, including the
seasonal progress of WUE and foliar capacity for carbon assimilation,
which corollate with seasonal leaf phenology. We incorporate these
findings into a modeling framework that contains the same representation
of A, E, and canopy scaling found in ESMs to explore the impact of
parameterization, which tracks phenological status, on model forecasts.
Our results indicate that both photosynthetic capacity and WUE are
seasonally dynamic processes which are not synchronized. WUE increased
from a minimum at leaf out toward a more conservative behavior at the
mid-summer growth peak. This pattern was explained by a decreased
stomatal aperture and a decrease in cuticular leakage with leaf aging.
We also observed a seasonal increase in maximum carboxylation capacity,
with maximum rates of A and modeled tree net primary productivity (NPP)
occurring later toward the end of the summer. This change was primarily
driven by an increase in foliar nitrogen content, and a shift in the
ratio of Vcmax to Jmax between expanding
and mature leaves. By applying our revised parameterization, which
captures seasonal dynamics of gas exchange, into our model framework we
aim to improve the process representation of leaf function in a
temperate forest, and more faithfully represent dynamics of NPP and E in
the early and late growth season.