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The hydraulic limitation hypothesis revisited
MICHAEL G. RYAN 1,2 NATHAN PHILLIPS 3 BARBARA J. BOND 4
  1 United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, 240 West Prospect RD, Fort Collins, CO 80526, USA,   2 Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, and Forest, Rangeland, and Watershed Stewardship Department, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA,   3 Department of Geography, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, USA, and   4 Department of Forest Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA
Correspondence to  Michael G. Ryan. E-mail: mgryan@fs.fed.us
Copyright © 2005 The Authors; Journal compilation © 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
carbon limitation • forest production • hydraulic conductance • photosynthesis • stomatal conductance to water vapor • tree • tree height limit • turgor pressure

ABSTRACT

AbstractINTRODUCTIONTHE HYDRAULIC LIMITATION HYPOTHESISLINKS BETWEEN REDUCED HEIGHT GROWTH,  AGE-RELATED  PRODUCTION DECLINE AND MAXIMUM HEIGHT?OTHER EXPLANATIONS FOR AGE-RELATED DECLINE IN NET PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY (NPP)REFERENCES

We proposed the hydraulic limitation hypothesis (HLH) as a mechanism to explain universal patterns in tree height, and tree and stand biomass growth: height growth slows down as trees grow taller, maximum height is lower for trees of the same species on resource-poor sites and annual wood production declines after canopy closure for even-aged forests. Our review of 51 studies that measured one or more of the components necessary for testing the hypothesis showed that taller trees differ physiologically from shorter, younger trees. Stomatal conductance to water vapour (gs), photosynthesis (A) and leaf-specific hydraulic conductance (KL) are often, but not always, lower in taller trees. Additionally, leaf mass per area is often greater in taller trees, and leaf area:sapwood area ratio changes with tree height. We conclude that hydraulic limitation of gas exchange with increasing tree size is common, but not universal. Where hydraulic limitations to A do occur, no evidence supports the original expectation that hydraulic limitation of carbon assimilation is sufficient to explain observed declines in wood production. Any limit to height or height growth does not appear to be related to the so-called age-related decline in wood production of forests after canopy closure. Future work on this problem should explicitly link leaf or canopy gas exchange with tree and stand growth, and consider a more fundamental assumption: whether tree biomass growth is limited by carbon availability.


Received 12 October 2005; accepted for publication 15 November 2005

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-3040.2005.01478.x About DOI

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