Skip to main content
Log in

Partitioning of water resources among plants of a lowland tropical forest

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Oecologia Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Source water used by plants of several species in a semi-evergreen lowland tropical forest on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, was assessed by comparing the relative abundance of deuterium, D, versus hydrogen, H (stable hydrogen isotope composition, δD) in xylem sap and in soil water at different depths, during the dry season of 1992. Ecological correlates of source water were examined by comparing xylem water δD values with leaf phenology, leaf water status determined with a pressure chamber, and rates of water use determined as mass flow of sap using the stem heat balance method. Soil water δD values decreased sharply to 30 cm, then remained relatively constant with increasing depth. Average δD values were-13‰, for 0–30 cm depth and-36.7‰ for 30–100 cm depth. Soil water δD values were negatively associated with soil water content and soil water potential. Concurrent analyses of xylem water revealed a high degree of partitioning of water resources among species of this tropical forest. Xylem water δD of deciduous trees (average=-25.3±1.4‰) was higher than that of evergreen trees (average=-36.3±3.5‰), indicating that evergreen species had access to the more abundant soil water at greater depth than deciduous species. In evergreen shade-tolerant and high-light requiring shrubs and small trees, δD of xylem water was negatively correlated with transpiration rate and leaf water potential indicating that species using deeper, more abundant water resources had both higher rates of water use and more favorable leaf water status.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Allison GB (1982) The relationship between 180 and deuterium in water in sand columns undergoing evaporation. J Hydrol 55: 163–169

    Google Scholar 

  • Allison GB, Hughes MH (1983) The use of natural tracers as indicators of soil water movement in a temperate semi-arid region. J Hydrol 60: 157–173

    Google Scholar 

  • Baker JM, Van Bavel CHM (1987) Measurement of the mass flow of water in the stems of herbaceous plants. Plant Cell Environ 10: 777–782

    Google Scholar 

  • Becker P, Castillo A (1990) Root architecture of shrubs and saplings in the understory of a tropical moist forest in lowland Panama. Biotropica 22: 242–249

    Google Scholar 

  • Becker P, Rabenold PE, Idol JR, Smith AP (1988) Gap and slope gradients of soil and plant water potentials during the dry season in a tropical moist forest. J Trop Ecol 4: 173–184

    Google Scholar 

  • Croat TB (1978) Flora of Barro Colorado Island. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif

    Google Scholar 

  • Dawson TE, Ehleringer JR (1991) Streamside trees that do not use stream water. Nature 350: 335–337

    Google Scholar 

  • Dawson TE, Ehleringer JR (1993) Isotopic enrichment of the water in “woody” tissues of plants: implications for plant water source, water uptake, and other studies which use stable isotopic composition of cellulose. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 57: 3487–3492

    Google Scholar 

  • Dincer T, Al-Mugrin A, Zimmermann U (1974) Study of the infiltration and recharge through the sand dunes in arid zones with special reference to the stable isotopes and thermonuclear tritium. J Hydrol 28: 79–109

    Google Scholar 

  • Ehleringer JR, Dawson TE (1992) Water uptake by plants: per-spectives from stable isotope composition. Plant Cell Environ 15: 1073–1082

    Google Scholar 

  • Ehleringer JR, Philips SL, Schuster WSF, Sandquist DR (1991) Differential utilization of summer rains by desert plants. Oecologia 88: 430–434

    Google Scholar 

  • Ewers FW, Fisher JB, Chiu ST (1989) Water transport in the liana Bauhinia fassoglensis (Fabaceae). Plant Physiol 91: 1625–1631

    Google Scholar 

  • Flanagan LB, Ehleringer JR (1991) Stable isotope composition of stem and leaf water: applications to the study of plant water use. Funct Ecol 5: 270–277

    Google Scholar 

  • Flanagan LB, Ehleringer JR, Marshall JD (1992) Differential uptake of summer precipitation among co-occurring trees and shrubs in a pinyon-juniper woodland. Plant Cell Environ 15: 831–836

    Google Scholar 

  • Gat JR, Gonfiantini R (eds) (1981) Stable isotope hydrology deuterium and oxygen 18 in the water cycle. (Technical Report Series no. 210) International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna

    Google Scholar 

  • Holbrook NM, Sinclair TR (1992) Water balance in the arborescent palm, Sabal palmetto. II. Transpiration and stem water storage. Plant Cell Environ 15: 401–409

    Google Scholar 

  • Jackson PC, Meinzer FC, Goldstein G, Holbrook NM, Cavelier J, Rada F (1993) Environmental and physiological influences on carbon isotope composition of gap and understory plants in a lowland tropical forest. In: Ehleringer JR, Hall AE, Farquhar GD (eds) Stable isotopes and plant carbon/water relations. Academic Press, San Diego, pp 131–140

    Google Scholar 

  • Leigh E, Rand AS, Windsor D (eds) (1982) The ecology of a tropical forest. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC

    Google Scholar 

  • Lin G, Sternberg LSL (1993) Hydrogen isotopic fractionation by plant roots during water uptake in coastal wetland plants. In: Ehleringer JR, Hall AE, Farquhar GD (eds) Stable isotopes and plant carbon/water relations. Academic Press, San Diego, pp 131–140

    Google Scholar 

  • Meinzer FC, Goldstein G, Holbrook NM, Jackson P, Cavelier J (1993) Stomatal and environmental control of transpiration in a lowland tropical forest tree. Plant Cell Environ 16: 429–436

    Google Scholar 

  • Rundel PW, Becker PF (1987) Cambios estacionales en las relaciones hidricas y en la fenologia vegetativa de plantas del estrato bajo del bosque tropical de la Isla de Barro Colorado, Panama. Rev Biol Trop 35: 71–84

    Google Scholar 

  • Sternberg LSL, Swart PK (1987) Utilization of freshwater and ocean water by coastal plants of southern Florida. Ecology 68: 1898–1905

    Google Scholar 

  • Thoma G, Esser N, Sonnatag C, Weiss W, Rudolf J, Leveque P (1979) New technique of in-situ soil moisture sampling for environmental isotope analyses applied at Pilat sand dune near Bordeaux. In: Proceedings of the 1978 Symposium on isotopes in hydrology. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, pp 753–766

    Google Scholar 

  • Valentini R, Scarascia Mugnozza GE, Ehleringer JR (1992) Hydrogen and carbon isotope ratios of selected species of a Mediterranean macchia ecosystem. Funct Ecol 6: 627–631

    Google Scholar 

  • White JWC (1989) Stable hydrogen isotope ratios in plants: a review of current theory and some potential applications. In: Rundel PW, Ehleringer JR, Nagy KA (eds) Stable isotopes in ecological research. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg New York, pp 142–162

    Google Scholar 

  • White JWC, Cook ER, Lawrence JR, Broecker WS (1985) The D/H ratios of sap in trees: implications for water sources and tree ring D/H ratios. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 49: 273–246

    Google Scholar 

  • Windsor DM (ed) (1982) The phenology of new leaf production for selected trees, shrubs and vines on Barro Colorado Isoland, Republic of Panama — a preliminary data report of the Environmental Science Program. ESP Phenology 1974–1979.

  • Windsor DM (1990) Climate and moisture availability in a tropical forest. Long term records from Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wright SJ, Machado JL, Mulkey SS, Smith A (1992) Drought acclimation among tropical forest shrubs (Psychotria, Rubiaceae). Oecologia 89: 457–463

    Google Scholar 

  • Zimmermann U, Ehhalt D, Munnich KO (1967) Soil water movement and evapo-transpiration: changes in the isotopic composition of the water. In: Proceedings of the 1966 Symposium on isotopes in hydrology. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, pp 567–584

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Jackson, P.C., Cavelier, J., Goldstein, G. et al. Partitioning of water resources among plants of a lowland tropical forest. Oecologia 101, 197–203 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00317284

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00317284

Key words

Navigation