Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.

(1) One strategy for plants to optimise stomatal function is to open and close their stomata quickly in response to environmental signals. It is generally assumed that small stomata can alter aperture faster than large stomata. (2) We tested the hypothesis that species with small stomata close fas...

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Main Authors: Caroline Elliott-Kingston, Matthew Haworth, Jon M. Yearsley, Sven P. Batke, Tracy Lawson, Jennifer C. McElwain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01253/full
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spelling doaj-ebe76ac36c0040bca7a7096bb0e7ca262020-11-25T02:30:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2016-08-01710.3389/fpls.2016.01253197656Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.Caroline Elliott-Kingston0Matthew Haworth1Jon M. Yearsley2Sven P. Batke3Tracy Lawson4Jennifer C. McElwain5University College DublinItalian National Research CouncilThe Earth Institute, O'Brien Centre for Science - University College DublinUniversity of EssexUniversity of EssexThe Earth Institute, O'Brien Centre for Science - University College Dublin(1) One strategy for plants to optimise stomatal function is to open and close their stomata quickly in response to environmental signals. It is generally assumed that small stomata can alter aperture faster than large stomata. (2) We tested the hypothesis that species with small stomata close faster than species with larger stomata in response to darkness by comparing rate of stomatal closure across an evolutionary range of species including ferns, cycads, conifers and angiosperms under controlled ambient conditions (380ppm CO2; 20.9% O2). (3) The two species with fastest half-closure time and the two species with slowest half-closure time had large stomata while the remaining three species had small stomata, implying that closing rate was not correlated with stomatal size in these species. Neither was response time correlated with stomatal density, phylogeny, functional group or life strategy. (4) Our results suggest that past atmospheric CO2 concentration during time of taxa diversification may influence stomatal response time. We show that species which last diversified under low or declining atmospheric CO2 concentration close stomata faster than species that last diversified in a high CO2 world. Low atmospheric [CO2] during taxa diversification may have placed a selection pressure on plants to accelerate stomatal closing to maintain adequate internal CO2 and optimise water use efficiency.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01253/fullstomatastomatal sizeAtmospheric CO2 concentrationtime of taxa diversificationHalf-closure time in response to darkness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline Elliott-Kingston
Matthew Haworth
Jon M. Yearsley
Sven P. Batke
Tracy Lawson
Jennifer C. McElwain
spellingShingle Caroline Elliott-Kingston
Matthew Haworth
Jon M. Yearsley
Sven P. Batke
Tracy Lawson
Jennifer C. McElwain
Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
Frontiers in Plant Science
stomata
stomatal size
Atmospheric CO2 concentration
time of taxa diversification
Half-closure time in response to darkness
author_facet Caroline Elliott-Kingston
Matthew Haworth
Jon M. Yearsley
Sven P. Batke
Tracy Lawson
Jennifer C. McElwain
author_sort Caroline Elliott-Kingston
title Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
title_short Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
title_full Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
title_fullStr Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
title_full_unstemmed Does size matter? Atmospheric CO2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low CO2.
title_sort does size matter? atmospheric co2 may be a stronger driver of stomatal closing rate than stomatal size in taxa that diversified under low co2.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2016-08-01
description (1) One strategy for plants to optimise stomatal function is to open and close their stomata quickly in response to environmental signals. It is generally assumed that small stomata can alter aperture faster than large stomata. (2) We tested the hypothesis that species with small stomata close faster than species with larger stomata in response to darkness by comparing rate of stomatal closure across an evolutionary range of species including ferns, cycads, conifers and angiosperms under controlled ambient conditions (380ppm CO2; 20.9% O2). (3) The two species with fastest half-closure time and the two species with slowest half-closure time had large stomata while the remaining three species had small stomata, implying that closing rate was not correlated with stomatal size in these species. Neither was response time correlated with stomatal density, phylogeny, functional group or life strategy. (4) Our results suggest that past atmospheric CO2 concentration during time of taxa diversification may influence stomatal response time. We show that species which last diversified under low or declining atmospheric CO2 concentration close stomata faster than species that last diversified in a high CO2 world. Low atmospheric [CO2] during taxa diversification may have placed a selection pressure on plants to accelerate stomatal closing to maintain adequate internal CO2 and optimise water use efficiency.
topic stomata
stomatal size
Atmospheric CO2 concentration
time of taxa diversification
Half-closure time in response to darkness
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01253/full
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