Abstract

Global climate change will increase surface soil temperature, with consequences on plant seedling growth and population dynamics. In this study, we carried out a field experiment to investigate the effects of 2 ℃ soil warming on the growth and physiological characteristics of 1- and 2-year-old seedlings of a dominant tree species in broadleaved Korean pine forest, Juglans mandshurica. The results showed that soil warming significantly increased basal diameter, root length, total leaf area, leaf dry weight, root dry weight, total biomass, apparent photosynthetic electron transfer rate (ETR), PSⅡ actual photochemical efficiency (ΦPSⅡ), and apparent photosynthetic electrophotochemical quenching coefficient (qP) of 1-year-old seedlings by 18.3%, 66.7%, 94.4%, 105.9%, 95.8%, 37.8%, 89.5%, 100.0%, and 71.4%, respectively. Soil warming significantly increased basal diameter, total leaf area, leaf dry weight, total biomass, leaf superoxide dismutase activity, peroxidase activity, catalase activity and free proline content, ETR, ΦPSⅡ, and qP of 2-year-old seedlings by 12.5%, 180.5%, 97.3%, 42.5%, 23.9%, 20.4%, 14.9%, 20.7%, 66.7%, 283.3% and 284.6%, respectively. There was an interaction between seedling age and soil warming on the root-shoot ratio and the ΦPSⅡ and qP in chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, in that soil warming significantly reduced the root-shoot ratio of 2-year-old seedlings and that the increase of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters of 2-year-old seedlings (4.1-4.6 times) was much higher than that of 1-year-old seedlings (1.5-1.8 times). Soil warming of 2 ℃ was beneficial to the growth of 1- and 2-year-old J. mandshurica seedlings and increased their regeneration potential. In particular, 2-year-old J. mandshurica seedlings responded to soil warming by increasing leaf area, improving leaf photochemical efficiency, and enhancing protective enzyme activity to increase resistance.

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