Abstract

Variations and trade-offs between leaf stoichiometric characteristics and photosynthetic traits are indicative of ecological adaptation strategies of plants and their responses to environment changes. In a common garden of Maoershan, we measured leaf stoichiometric characteristics (carbon content (C), nitrogen content (N), phosphorus content (P), C/N, C/P, N/P) and photosynthetic traits (maximum net photosynthetic rate (Amax), maximum electron transport rate (Jmax), maximum carboxylation rate (Vmax)) of Larix gmelinii from 17 geographical provenances. We examined the provenance differences in stoichiometric characteristics and photosynthetic traits, and analyzed their trade-offs and influencing factors. The results showed leaf stoichiometric characteristics and photosynthetic traits significantly differed among provenances. The climatic factors of seed-source sites explained 54.8% and 67.2% of the variation in stoichiometric characteristics and photosynthetic traits, respectively. Aridity index (AI) of seed-source sites was positively correlated with C, N, P, Amax, Jmax, Vmax, but negatively with C/N, C/P, and N/P. Results of redundancy analysis showed that stoichiometric characteristics accounted for 75.0% of the variation in photosynthetic traits. Amax, Jmax, Vmax were positively correlated with C, N, P, and negatively correlated with C/N, C/P, N/P. The provenance differences in stoichiometric characteristics, photosynthetic traits, and their synergistic relationship suggested the long-term adaptation of trees to the climate of seed-source sites. These findings were of great significance for understanding ecological adaptation strategies of trees in response to climate change.

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