Abstract

The tree species black alder [Alnus glutinosa (L.) Gaertn.] typically inhabits wet sites in central Europe but is also successful on well drained soils. To test the physiological adjustment of the species in situ, conductances, transpiration rates and water potentials (Scholander pressure chamber) of black alder leaves were investigated at two neighbouring sites with different water regimes: alder trees at an occasionally water logged alder forest and alder shrubs in a nearby, much drier hedgerow. Additional experiments with alder cuttings in nutrient culture showed that leaf conductances and gas exchange were both strongly influenced by the substrate water potential. In situ however, there was little spatial variability within the different parts of a crown and we found that physiological regulation at leaf level was hardly influenced by different site water regimes or different tree sizes. Diurnal courses of leaf water relations as well as their regulation at the leaf level (e.g. the hyperbolic relationship between conductances and ΔW) were strikingly similar at both sites. Leaf water potential in black alder was shown to be a consequence of immediate transpiration rates, which were high in comparison to other tree species (up to 4 mmol H2O m–2 s–1), rather than the water potentials being a factor that influenced conductance and, therefore, transpiration. The always high leaf conductances and consequent high transpiration rates are interpreted as a strategy to maximise productivity through low stomatal limitation at sites where water supply is usually not limited. However, at the same time this behaviour restricts black alder to sites where at least the deep-going roots can exploit water.

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