Reprint

Plant Adaptation to Extreme Environments in Drylands—Series II

Edited by
May 2024
216 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1188-5 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1187-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Plant Adaptation to Extreme Environments in Drylands—Series II that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Our reprint consists of 13 papers. The first paper is a summary of all the papers. In the second and third papers, foliar water uptake and its driving mechanisms are addressed. In the fourth and fifth papers, differences in functional traits, including chemical and physiological traits, across water environmental gradients and between organic tissues are examined. The sixth paper describes the effects of trait variation on plant diversity and ecosystem function. The seventh and eighth papers investigate the differences in nutrients between different tissues in plants and how they vary along environmental gradients. In the ninth study, the changes in tree cavities across the environmental gradient are expounded. Papers ten through eleventh describe the relationship among soil microbes, plants, and the environment. The twelve paper describes the vegetation response to runoff changes at the landscape scale. The last paper studies the impact of highway construction on ecosystem function.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
arid area; foliar water uptake strategies; isohydry; leaf wettability; turgor loss point; Tugai forest; arid area; dioecy; wet leaves; physiological; functional trait; intraspecific trait variation; functional diversity; community assembly; arid desert region; Ebinur Lake watershed; bivariate spatial autocorrelation; Google Earth Engine; InVEST model; water deficit; nitrogen addition; functional traits; Haloxylon ammodendron; microbial community diversity; plant leaf chemical traits; interspecific trait integration; soil water and salinity habitats; plant trait network; desert plant; arid area; artificial shelter forest; photosynthesis; biomass; carbon storage; carbon trading; soil bacterial community; PICRUSt2 function prediction; soil physicochemical properties; arid desert area; sandy land restoration; desert plants; plant organs; stable carbon isotope; ecological stoichiometry; Kalidium foliatum; salt stress; desert; biochemical characteristics; functional degradation; tree hollow; adaptation strategy; environmental stress; Populus euphratica; desert ecosystems; plant organs; growth forms; elemental concentrations; climatic variables; n/a