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Plant water relations at elevated CO2 -- implications for water-limited environments.

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TLDR
It is suggested that the hydraulic principles that govern water transport provide an integrating framework that would allow CO2-induced changes in stomatal conductance, leaf water potential, root growth and other processes to be uniquely evaluated within the context of whole-plant hydraulic conductance and water transport efficiency.
Abstract
Long-term exposure of plants to elevated [CO 2 ] leads to a number of growth and physiological effects, many of which are interpreted in the context of ameliorating the negative impacts of drought. However, despite considerable study, a clear picture in terms of the influence of elevated [CO 2 ] on plant water relations and the role that these effects play in determining the response of plants to elevated [CO 2 ] under water-limited conditions has been slow to emerge. In this paper, four areas of research are examined that represent critical, yet uncertain, themes related to the response of plants to elevated [CO 2 ] and drought. These include (1) fine-root proliferation and implications for whole-plant water uptake; (2) enhanced water-use efficiency and consequences for drought tolerance; (3) reductions in stomatal conductance and impacts on leaf water potential; and (4) solute accumulation, osmotic adjustment and dehydration tolerance of leaves. A survey of the literature indicates that the growth of plants at elevated [CO 2 ] can lead to conditions whereby plants maintain higher (less negative) leaf water potentials. The mechanisms that contribute to this effect are not fully known, although CO 2 -induced reductions in stomatal conductance, increases in whole-plant hydraulic conductance and osmotic adjustment may be important. Less understood are the interactive effects of elevated [CO 2 ] and drought on fine-root production and water-use efficiency, and the contribution of these processes to plant growth in water-limited environments. Increases in water-use efficiency and reductions in water use can contribute to enhanced soil water content under elevated [CO 2 ]. Herbaceous crops and grasslands are most responsive in this regard. The conservation of soil water at elevated [CO 2 ] in other systems has been less studied, but in terms of maintaining growth or carbon gain during drought, the benefits of CO 2 -induced improvements in soil water content appear relatively minor. Nonetheless, because even small effects of elevated [CO 2 ] on plant and soil water relations can have important implications for ecosystems, we conclude that this area of research deserves continued investigation. Future studies that focus on cellular mechanisms of plant response to elevated [CO 2 ] and drought are needed, as are whole-plant investigations that emphasize the integration of processes throughout the soil‐plant‐ atmosphere continuum. We suggest that the hydraulic principles that govern water transport provide an integrating framework that would allow CO 2 -induced changes in stomatal conductance, leaf water potential, root growth and other processes to be uniquely evaluated within the context of whole-plant hydraulic conductance and water transport efficiency.

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The role of stomata in sensing and driving environmental change.

TL;DR: Stomatal morphology, distribution and behaviour respond to a spectrum of signals, from intracellular signalling to global climatic change, which results from a web of control systems reminiscent of a ‘scale-free’ network, whose untangling requires integrated approaches beyond those currently used.
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The response of photosynthesis and stomatal conductance to rising [CO2]: mechanisms and environmental interactions.

TL;DR: Improved understanding of the molecular and biochemical mechanisms by which plants respond to elevated [CO2], and the feedback of environmental factors upon them, will improve the ability to predict ecosystem responses to rising [ CO2] and increase the potential to adapt crops and managed ecosystems to future atmospheric [CO 2].
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Climate change and Australia: Trends, projections and impacts

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

More Efficient Plants : a consequence of rising atmospheric CO2

TL;DR: The primary effect of plants response of plants to rising atmospheric CO2 (Ca) is to increase resource use efficiency, and at the same time it stimulates higher rates of photosynthesis and increases light-use efficiency as discussed by the authors.
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A meta-analysis of elevated CO2 effects on woody plant mass, form, and physiology

TL;DR: Meta-analytic methods used to summarize and interpret more than 500 reports of effects of elevated CO2 on woody plant biomass accumulation and partitioning, gas exchange, and leaf nitrogen and starch content provide robust, statistically defensible estimates of elevatedCO2 effect sizes for use in forest and climate model parameterization.
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Modification of the response of photosynthetic productivity to rising temperature by atmospheric CO2 concentrations: Has its importance been underestimated?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantitatively examined the implications of concurrent increase in temperature and atmospheric CO2 concentration (Ca) on the response of leaf and canopy carbon exchange to climate change and found that an increase in Ca from 350 to 650 μmol mol-1 can increase Asat by 20% at 10°C and by 105% at 35°C.
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The interaction between elevated carbon dioxide and nitrogen nutrition: the physiological and molecular background

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the numerous studies that have described the interaction between the nitrogen supply and the response of photosynthesis, metabolism, and growth to elevated [CO2].
Journal ArticleDOI

Crop responses to carbon dioxide doubling: a literature survey

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify strengths and weaknesses in the knowledge base for modelling plant responses to CO 2, based on an extensive tabulation of published information on responses of ten leading crop species to elevated CO 2.
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