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A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait

In light of increased drought frequency and intensity due to climate change, knowledge of how plant drought tolerance is affected is important for understanding plant vulnerability to these changes. Minimum conductance (gmin) describes the residual rate of water loss by a plant through its leaves wh...

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Main Author: Irlam, Huw
Other Authors: West, Adam
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Irlam, Huw
author2 West, Adam
author_browse Irlam, Huw
West, Adam
author_facet West, Adam
Irlam, Huw
author_sort Irlam, Huw
collection Thesis
description In light of increased drought frequency and intensity due to climate change, knowledge of how plant drought tolerance is affected is important for understanding plant vulnerability to these changes. Minimum conductance (gmin) describes the residual rate of water loss by a plant through its leaves when it has closed its stomata in order to minimise that water loss rate. This includes contributions to water loss through incompletely closed or leaky stomata, the waxy cuticle layer, or through wounding and scarring. This understudied conductance parameter is a critical piece to understanding plant dry-down time to death. However, definitions of this trait have historically been inconsistent leading to non-standardised methods for measurement, which lack an underlying theoretical basis. This obscures assessment of the existing variability and sensitivity of this important trait. In this thesis, clear definitions for minimum conductance are provided. A theory-based and biologically meaningful framework for measuring this trait over the stomatal safety margin is proposed. There is a focus on standardisation of existing methods, while increasing applicability and reproducibility on plants with a variety of morphologies. Using this framework, an assessment of minimum conductance was carried out on three characteristic and well-studied plant families of the Cape Floristic Region, namely Proteaceae, Ericaceae, and Restionaceae, to improve our understanding of drought response in these groups while demonstrating how this framework helps to improve minimum conductance measurements. Results showed a diverse response of minimum conductance values indicative of diverse drought strategies. This highlights the importance of including accurate values of minimum conductance in models predicting plant mortality under changing climate conditions.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:38:24.297Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42306 A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait Irlam, Huw West, Adam Skelton, Robert Plant drought In light of increased drought frequency and intensity due to climate change, knowledge of how plant drought tolerance is affected is important for understanding plant vulnerability to these changes. Minimum conductance (gmin) describes the residual rate of water loss by a plant through its leaves when it has closed its stomata in order to minimise that water loss rate. This includes contributions to water loss through incompletely closed or leaky stomata, the waxy cuticle layer, or through wounding and scarring. This understudied conductance parameter is a critical piece to understanding plant dry-down time to death. However, definitions of this trait have historically been inconsistent leading to non-standardised methods for measurement, which lack an underlying theoretical basis. This obscures assessment of the existing variability and sensitivity of this important trait. In this thesis, clear definitions for minimum conductance are provided. A theory-based and biologically meaningful framework for measuring this trait over the stomatal safety margin is proposed. There is a focus on standardisation of existing methods, while increasing applicability and reproducibility on plants with a variety of morphologies. Using this framework, an assessment of minimum conductance was carried out on three characteristic and well-studied plant families of the Cape Floristic Region, namely Proteaceae, Ericaceae, and Restionaceae, to improve our understanding of drought response in these groups while demonstrating how this framework helps to improve minimum conductance measurements. Results showed a diverse response of minimum conductance values indicative of diverse drought strategies. This highlights the importance of including accurate values of minimum conductance in models predicting plant mortality under changing climate conditions. 2025-11-24T09:00:53Z 2025-11-24T09:00:53Z 2025 2025-11-24T08:36:58Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42306 en eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Plant drought
Irlam, Huw
A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
title_full A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
title_fullStr A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
title_full_unstemmed A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
title_short A theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance, an understudied plant drought trait
title_sort theoretical and empirical framework for measuring minimum conductance an understudied plant drought trait
topic Plant drought
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42306
work_keys_str_mv AT irlamhuw atheoreticalandempiricalframeworkformeasuringminimumconductanceanunderstudiedplantdroughttrait
AT irlamhuw theoreticalandempiricalframeworkformeasuringminimumconductanceanunderstudiedplantdroughttrait