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Dryad

Altitudinal variation of leaf carbon isotope for Dendrosenecio keniensis and Lobelia gregoriana in Mount Kenya alpine zone

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May 11, 2021 version files 138.35 KB

Abstract

Abiotic factors vary along altitudinal gradients, and this may influence plant morphology, physiology and function. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that leaf δ13C,  a common proxy for water use efficiency, was indirectly influenced by morphological adjustments with changing climatic factors along an altitudinal gradient on Mt. Kenya. We sampled leaves of Dendrosenecio keniensis and Lobelia gregoriana using seventy-two 10 × 10 m plots situated every 100 m starting from 3600 to 4300 m. We determined leaf δ13C using stable isotope mass spectrometry. We also quantified the following morphological factors; leaf area, leaf mass per area, specific leaf area and leaf thickness. Climate data included mean annual temperature and precipitation, diurnal temperature range and water vapor pressure. Our results revealed that there was a leaf δ13C enrichment of 1.76 ‰km-1 and 1.62‰ km-1 with altitude for D. keniensis and L. gregoriana respectively. Leaf δ13C was enrichment by 0.01‰ mm-1 with mean annual precipitation along the altitude gradient for D. keniensis and 0.02‰ mm-1 for L. gregoriana. D. keniensis and L. gregoriana have high water use efficiency, an adaptation for surviving near freezing alpine temperatures and high diurnal range. Leaf δ13C exhibited a depletion of -0.37‰ per o C increase of mean annual temperature along the altitude gradient for D. keniensis and -0.34‰ per o C increase for L. gregoriana. Our results also showed a negative relationship between pCO2 and leaf δ13C and positive relationship between pCO2 and 13C for both species. Low temperatures led to the increase in leaf thickness and specific leaf area for these two species, factors that influenced leaf δ13C and ∆13C.