Carbon isotope discrimination and water relations of oak hybrid populations in southwestern Utah

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Ehleringer, James R.
Other Author Williams, David G.
Title Carbon isotope discrimination and water relations of oak hybrid populations in southwestern Utah
Date 2000
Description The evergreen oak Quercus turbinella and the deciduous Q. gambelii form natural hybrids in southwestern Utah and northern Arizona. Hybrid individuals also are found in northern Utah in a region where only Q. gambelii currently exists, indicating that Q. turbinella has recently retreated southward. Our objectives were to (1) examine the ecophysiology of parental taxa and hybrids under natural conditions in southeastern Utah, and (2) investigate the level of integration between leaf carbon isotope discrimination (a synthetic gas exchange trait) and structural and chemical traits of leaves in morphologically variable hybrid populations. Leaf length, width, mass-to-area ratio (LMA, g m-2), and nitrogen concentration (N, g g-1) within 2 hybrid populations near New Harmony, Utah, were highly intercorrelated. Variation within the hybrid populations spanned mean values for these traits observed in parental taxa from adjacent "pure" populations of each species. Carbon isotope discrimination (Δ), an integrated measure of the ratio of intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration, ranged from 16.1‰ to 19.6‰ within the 2 hybrid populations and was positively correlated with leaf nitrogen concentration and negatively correlated with LMA; individuals in hybrid populations with leaves resembling Q. gambelii had the highest leaf Δ and N concentrations and lowest LMA compared with leaves from plants that resembled Q. turbinella. CO2 uptake is limited by stomatal conductance and possibly by mesophyll resistance to a greater extent in Q. turbinella phenotypes than in intermediate or Q. gambelii phenotypes.
Type Text
Publisher Western North American Naturalist
Volume 60
Issue 2
First Page 121
Last Page 129
Subject Quercus turbinella; Oak hybrids; Leaf structure; Leaf nitrogen; Carbon isotope discrimination; Water potential; Oak ecology
Subject LCSH Quercus gambelii; Climatic changes -- Environmental aspects
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Williams, D. G., & Ehleringer, J. R. (2000). Carbon isotope discrimination and water relations of oak hybrid populations in Southwestern Utah. Western North American Naturalist, 60(2), 121-9.
Rights Management (c)Western North American Naturalist
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 92,533 bytes
Identifier ir-main,7376
ARK ark:/87278/s6223c66
Setname ir_uspace
ID 705469
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6223c66
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