Abstract

To test whether stomatal density measurements on oak leaf remains are reliable tools for assessing palaeoatmospheric carbon dioxide concentration [CO2], under changing Late Miocene palaeoenvironmental conditions, young seedings of oak (Quercus petraea,Liebl.) were grown at elevatedvs.ambient atmospheric [CO2] and at high humidity combined with an increased air temperature. The leaf anatomy of the young oaks was compared with that of fossil leaves of the same species. In the experiments, stomatal density and stomatal index were significantly decreased at elevated [CO2] in comparison to ambient [CO2]. Elevated [CO2] induced leaf cell expansion and reduced the intercellular air space by 35%. Leaf cell size or length were also stimulated at high air humidity and temperature. Regardless of a temperate or subtropical palaeoclimate, leaf cell size in fossil oak was not enhanced, since neither epidermal cell density nor length of the stomatal apparatus changed. The absence of these effects may be attributed to the phenological response of trees to climatic changes that balanced temporal changes in environmental variables to maintain leaf growth under optimal and stable conditions.Quercus petraea,which evolved under recurring depletions in the palaeoatmospheric [CO2], may possess sufficient phenotypic plasticity to alter stomatal frequency in hypostomatous leaves allowing high maximum stomatal conductance and high assimilation rates during these phases of low [CO2].

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