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Tropical Biology |
2School of Forest Resources and Conservation, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, P.O. Box 110760, Gainesville, Florida 32611-0760 USA; 3Department of Botany, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Florida, P.O. Box 118526, Gainesville, Florida 34002-8526 USA; 4Laboratório de Ecofitologia e Propagação de Plantas, Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária-Amazônia Oriental, Trav. Dr. Enéas Pinheiro S/N-Marco, CX.POSTAL 48, Belém, Pará CEP-66095-100, Brazil
Analyses of the effects of drought stress on Amazonian regrowth stands are lacking. We measured leaf gas exchange and leaf water potential of Miconia ciliata (Melastomataceae) in a dry-season irrigation experiment in 14-yr-old regrowth. In the dry season, irrigated plants maintained significantly higher leaf water potentials, photosynthetic capacity at light saturation (Amax), stomatal conductance (gs), internal CO2 concentration (Ci), and lower Amax/gs than control plants. The degree of dry-season down-regulation of control plant Amax, along with its fast recovery following rain, reveals the importance of occasional dry-season rains to the carbon budget of M. ciliata. During the wet season, we observed higher Amax for control plants than for plants that had been irrigated during the dry season. We hypothesize that reduced drought constraints on photosynthesis of irrigated plants advanced the flowering and fruiting phenology of irrigated plants into the dry season. Flowers and fruits of control plants developed later, during the wet season, potentially stimulating a compensatory reproductive photosynthesis response in nearby leaves. The relative drought intolerance of M. ciliata may be a deciding factor in its ability to survive through the dynamic successional development of the regrowth stand studied.
Key Words: Amazon compensatory (reproductive) photosynthesis dry-season irrigation leaf water potential Melastomataceae Miconia ciliata phenology secondary forest tropical forests
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