Abstract

Soil-leaf hydraulic conductance determines canopy-atmosphere coupling in vegetation models, but it is typically derived from ex-situ measurements of stem segments and soil samples. Using a novel approach, we derive robust in-situ estimates for whole-tree conductance (ktree ), 'functional' soil conductance (ksoil ), and 'system' conductance (ksystem , water table to canopy), at two climatically different tropical rainforest sites. Hydraulic 'functional rooting depth', determined for each tree using profiles of soil water potential (Ψsoil ) and sap flux data, enabled a robust determination of ktree and ksoil . ktree was compared across species, size classes, seasons, height above nearest drainage (HAND), two field sites, and to alternative representations of ktree ; ksoil was analysed with respect to variations in site, season and HAND. ktree was lower and changed seasonally at the site with higher vapour pressure deficit (VPD) and rainfall; ktree differed little across species but scaled with tree circumference; rsoil (1/ksoil ) ranged from 0 in the wet season to 10× less than rtree (1/ktree ) in the dry season. VPD and not rainfall may influence plot-level k; leaf water potentials and sap flux can be used to determine ktree , ksoil and ksystem ; Ψsoil profiles can provide mechanistic insights into ecosystem-level water fluxes.

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