November 15, 2023
Journal Article

Carbon starvation following a decade of experimental drought consumes old reserves in Pinus edulis.

Abstract

Shifts in the age or turnover time of non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) may underlie changes in tree growth under long-term increases in drought stress associated with climate change. But NSC responses to drought are challenging to quantify, due in part to large NSC stores in trees and subsequently long response times of NSC to climate variation. We measured NSC age (?14C) along with a suite of ecophysiological metrics in Pinus edulis trees experiencing either extreme short-term drought (-90% ambient precipitation plot, 2020-2021) or a decade of severe drought (-45% plot, 2010-2021). We tested the hypothesis that carbon starvation—consumption exceeding synthesis and storage—increases the age of sapwood NSC. One year of extreme drought had no impact on NSC pool size or age, despite significant reductions in pre-dawn water potential, photosynthetic rates/capacity, and twig and needle growth. In contrast, long-term drought halved the age of the sapwood NSC pool, coupled with reductions in sapwood starch concentrations (-75%), basal area increment (-39%), and bole respiration rates (-28%). Our results suggest carbon starvation takes time, as tree carbon reserves appear resilient to extreme disturbance in the short-term. However, after a decade of drought, trees apparently consumed old stored NSC to support metabolism.

Published: November 15, 2023

Citation

Peltier D., M.S. Carbone, C. Mcintire, N. Robertson, R.A. Thompson, S. Malone, and J. LeMoine, et al. 2023. Carbon starvation following a decade of experimental drought consumes old reserves in Pinus edulis. New Phytologist 240, no. 1:92-104. PNNL-SA-192434. doi:10.1111/nph.19119

Research topics