Rising temperature associated with climate change may have substantial impacts on forest tree functions. We conducted a 7-year warming experiment in sub-tropical China by translocating important native forest tree species… Click to show full abstract
Rising temperature associated with climate change may have substantial impacts on forest tree functions. We conducted a 7-year warming experiment in sub-tropical China by translocating important native forest tree species (Machilas breviflora, Syzygium rehderianum, Schima superba and Itea chinensis) from cooler high-elevation-sites (600 m) to 1-2 ℃ warmer low-elevation-sites (300 and 30 m) to investigate warming effects on leaf hydraulic and economic traits. Here, we report data from the last three years (Years 5-7) of the experiment. Warming increased leaf hydraulic conductance (Kleaf ) of S. superba to meet the higher evaporative demand. M. breviflora (300 m), S. rehderianum, S. superba and I. chinensis (300 m and 30 m) exhibited higher area-based and mass-based maximum photosynthetic rates (Aa and Am , respectively) related to increasing stomatal conductance (gs ) and stomatal density in the wet season, which led to rapid growth; however, we observed decreased growth of M. breviflora at 30 m due to lower stomatal density and decreased Aa in the wet season. Warming increased photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE) and photosynthetic phosphorus use efficiency (PPUE), but reduced leaf dry mass per unit area (LMA) due to lower leaf thickness, suggesting that these tree species allocated more resources into upregulating photosynthesis rather than into structural investment. Our findings highlight that there was trait variation in the capacity of trees to acclimate to warmer temperatures such that I. chinensis may benefit from warming, but S. superba may be negatively influenced by warming in future climates.
               
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