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Effects of plant size and water relations on gas exchange and growth of the desert shrub Larrea tridentata

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Franco, Augusto C, Soyza, Amrita G, Virginia, Ross A, Reynolds, James F, and Whitford, Walter G, Effects of plant size and water relations on gas exchange and growth of the desert shrub Larrea tridentata: .

Summary

Larrea tridentata is a xerophytic evergreen shrub, dominant in the arid regions of the southwestern United States. We examined relationships between gasexchange characteristics, plant and soil water relations, and growth responses of large versus small shrubs of L. tridentata over the course of a summer growing season in the Chihuahuan Desert of southern New Mexico, USA. The soil wetting front did not reach 0.6 m, and soils at depths of 0.6 and 0.9 m remained dry throughout the summer, suggesting that L. tridentata extracts water largely from soil near the surface. Surface soil layers (max) occurred in early summer (21.3 � mol m-2 s-1), when pre-dawn xylem water potential (XWP) reached ca. -1 MPa. Although both shrub sizes exhibited [...]

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From Source - Mendeley RIS Export <br> On - Wed Sep 19 07:58:02 MDT 2012

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Title Citation Effects of plant size and water relations on gas exchange and growth of the desert shrub Larrea tridentata

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