Maximum leaf conductance driven by CO 2 effects on stomatal size and density over geologic time

University of Sheffield · Yale University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Stomatal pores are microscopic structures on the epidermis of leaves formed by 2 specialized guard cells that control the exchange of water vapor and CO(2) between plants and the atmosphere. Stomatal size (S) and density (D) determine maximum leaf diffusive (stomatal) conductance of CO(2) (g(c(max))) to sites of assimilation. Although large variations in D observed in the fossil record have been correlated with atmospheric CO(2), the crucial significance of similarly large variations in S has been overlooked. Here, we use physical diffusion theory to explain why large changes in S necessarily accompanied the changes in D and atmospheric CO(2) over the last 400 million years. In particular, we show that high…

Citation impact

934
total citations
FWCI
26.96
Percentile
100%
References
34
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Stomatal density
  • Guard cell
  • Stomatal conductance
  • Conductance
  • Atmospheric sciences
  • Atmosphere (unit)
  • Diffusion
  • Chemistry
No related works found for this paper.