Abstract

Drought and subsequent rewatering are common in agriculture, where recovery from mild droughts is easier than from severe ones. The specific drought threshold and factors limiting recovery are under-researched. This study subjected maize plants to varying drought degrees before rewatering, and measuring plant water status, gas exchange, hydraulic conductance, hormone levels, and cellular damage throughout. We discovered that stomatal reopening in plants was inhibited with leaf water potentials below about -1.7 MPa, hindering postdrought photosynthetic recovery. Neither hydraulic loss nor abscisic acid (ABA) content was the factor inhibited stomatal reopening on the second day following moderate drought stress and rewatering. But stomatal reopening was significantly correlated to the interaction between hydraulic signals and ABA content under severe drought. Extended drought led to leaf death at about -2.8 MPa or 57% relative water content, influenced by reduced rehydration capacity, not hydraulic failure. The lethal threshold remained relatively constant across leaf stages, but the recoverable safety margin (RSM), that is, the water potential difference between stomatal closure and recovery capacity loss, significantly decreased with leaf aging due to delayed stomatal closure during drought. Our findings indicate hydraulic failure alone does not cause maize leaf death, highlighting the importance of RSM in future research.

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