Abstract

To explain why the composition of evergreen and deciduous forests changes along air temperature gradients, we measured several traits of single leaves from temperate deciduous and evergreen broadleaf trees with simultaneous and successive leaf emergence growing at different altitudes in the field. The parameters included seasonal net photosynthetic rate, longevity, mass per area, nitrogen content, and photosynthetic nitrogen-use efficiency. With decreasing altitude, the leaf longevity of deciduous broadleaf trees increased, whereas the maximum net photosynthetic rate decreased. In contrast, leaf longevity of evergreen broadleaf trees decreased, whereas the minimum net photosynthetic rate in winter increased. Along the air temperature gradient, the annual production of deciduous trees with simultaneous leaf emergence may be constant, because the integrated lifetime net photosynthetic rate (ILNPR) of a single leaf changed little. In comparison, deciduous trees with successive leaf emergence may show enhanced annual production with increasing air temperature, by increasing the total leaf number per branch and tree under an extended growing season. Temperate evergreen broadleaf tree species may also show increased annual production with increasing air temperature by sufficiently raising the number of the first-year leaves to the total leaves of branch and tree, which is accelerated by raising the integrated first-year net photosynthetic rate of the single leaf, despite little change in the ILNPR. With increasing air temperature from cool-temperate to warm-temperate zones, evergreen broadleaf tree species gain an advantage of the annual production over deciduous broadleaf tree species with simultaneous leaf emergence.

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