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- Title
Sexual differences in growth and defence of Populus yunnanensis under drought stress.
- Authors
Zhang, Rong; Liu, Junyan; Liu, Qinsong; He, Hengguo; Xu, Xiao; Dong, Tingfa
- Abstract
Dioecious woody species often exhibit male-biased sex ratios under drought habitat, which may result in vulnerability in drying soils. However, whether biased sex ratios are associated with sex-specific responses in growth and defence against insect herbivory under drought stress conditions is unknown. We investigated the sexual responses in terms of growth and defence in Populus yunnanensis Dode in response to two water treatments (40% and 100% field capacity). Drought stress reduced the plant growth (e.g., height increment, gas exchange, photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency, and water potential) of both sexes and reduced the leaf water content and defensive performance (increased damaged area by leaf-chewing generalists and decreased leaf contents of total phenolics, condensed tannins, and flavonoids) of the females but not the males. Moreover, female defensive performance was lower than that of the males under drought conditions. Additionally, the plant mortality rate increased for both sexes, and it was higher for females than for males during drought stress in response to all leaf defoliation treatments. Our results suggest that sexual responses in terms of growth and defence to drought are significantly different and that P. yunnanensis females have a lower defence capability than males, which may explain the male-biased sex ratio that exists in the natural population. Hence, this study provides new insight into forecasting population dynamics for dioecious plant species in drying habitats.
- Subjects
PLANT defenses; DROUGHT tolerance; DIOECIOUS plants; SEX ratio among plants; FLAVONOIDS
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 2019, Vol 49, Issue 5, p491
- ISSN
0045-5067
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/cjfr-2018-0270