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Photosynthetic response of four fern species from different habitats to drought stress: relationship between morpho-anatomical and physiological traits
16
Citations
39
References
2017
Year
Fern SpeciesPlant PhysiologyEngineeringPhotorespirationBotanyPlant StressAbiotic StressPlant EcologyStomatal DensityPhotosynthesisPlant-abiotic InteractionDrought StressCrop Water RelationPhotomorphogenesisMuch Lower PhotosynthesisBiologyDroughtNatural SciencesPhotosynthetic ResponseLow Wue
Ferns flourish in many habitats, from epiphytic to terrestrial and from sunny to shady, and such varied conditions require contrasting photosynthetic strategies to cope with drought. Four species of temperate ferns from different habitats were subjected to drought by withholding irrigation in order to investigate their photosynthetic responses. Lepisorus thunbergianus (epiphytic) had low stomatal density and showed high water-use efficiency (WUE) retaining photosynthetic activity with low relative frond water content under drought stress, which suggested their high adaptation to drought. On the other hand, low WUE with low light-saturated photosynthetic rate in Adiantum pedatum (terrestrial, shady environment) was associated with much lower photosynthesis than in the other species under drought stress, suggesting lower adaptation to drought-prone habitats. Morphological stomatal traits such as stomatal density and photosynthetic response to drought in ferns involved species-specific adaptation to survive and grow in their natural habitats with different levels of drought.
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