Abstract
The Climate Change Experiment (CLIMEX) is a unique large scale facility in which an entire undisturbed catchment of boreal vegetation has been exposed to elevated CO 2 (560 ppm) and temperature (+3°C summer, +5°C winter) for the past three years with all the soil-plant-atmosphere linkages intact. Here, carbon isotope composition and stomatal density have been analysed from sequential year classes of needles of mature Scots pine trees ( Pinus sylvestris L.) to investigate the response of time-integrated water-use efficiency (UWE) and stomatal density to CO 2 enrichment and climate change. Carbon isotope discrimination decreased and WUE increased in cohorts of needles developing under increased CO 2 and temperature, compared to needles on the same trees developing in pretreatment years. Mid-season instantaneous gas exchange, measured on the same trees for the past four years, indicated that these responses resulted from higher needle photosynthetic rates and reduced stomatal conductance. Needles of P. sylvestris developing under increased CO 2 and temperature had consistently lower stomatal densities than their ambient grown counterparts on the same trees. The stomatal density of P. sylvestris needles was inversely correlated with δ 13C-derived WUE, implying some effect of this morphological response on leaf gas exchange. Future atmospheric CO 2 and temperature increases are therefore likely to improve the water economy of P. sylvestris, at least at the scale of individual needles, by affecting stomatal density and gas exchange processes.
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