Supplement 1. Data used in the present analysis, including new stomatal slope data for five species and previously published Switchgrass observations of Vc,max, SLA, leaf width, and fine-root : leaf ratio.
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File List
stomatal_slope.csv (MD5: e7be44c77a35e03b1f4b8d3666f7ebb1)
pavi_data.csv (MD5: 614c310d746cb8f31a58db3a8c7a23e9) – Previously published Switchgrass data used in the present analysis.
Description
Stomatal slope was estimated using measurements of four leaves from each of five field-grown energy crop species during the 2010 growing season. The five species included two C4 grasses: Miscanthus (Miscanthus x giganteus) and Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) planted in 2008 and three deciduous tree species: Red Maple (Acer rubrum), Eastern Cottonwood (Populus deltoides) and Sherburne Willow (Salix x Sherburne) planted in 2010 as 2 year old saplings. All plants were grown at the Energy Biosciences Institute Energy Farm (40°10'N, 88°03'W). Photosynthesis (A), stomatal conductance (gs), intercellular [CO2] (ci), and humidity deficit at the leaf surface (Ds) were obtained via open gas exchange systems with 2 cm² leaf chambers housing infrared gas analyzers to measure fluxes of both CO2 and water (LI-6400; LI-COR Inc., Lincoln, NE, USA). Data were collected following a simplified version of the protocol described by Leakey et al. (2006) in which photosynthetic photon flux density was maintained at 1500 μmol·m-2·s-1, leaf temperature was 25±3°C and the vapor pressure deficit from leaf to air was < 2 kPa while [CO2] entering the chamber was varied stepwise (400, 250, 350, 450, 650, 850, 1200, 1500 ppm). A minimum of 20 minutes was allowed for A and gs to completely stabilize before data were collected at each [CO2]. For each individual leaf, linear least squares regression was used to estimate the stomatal slope based on the Ball et al. (1987) model of stomatal conductance (not used in present study but provided as data in [appendix]), and then separately for the Leuning (1995) model of stomatal conductance. A common value of Γ = 40μP/Pa, and D0 = 1500 Pa was used in accordance with Leuning (1995).
The stomatal_slope.csv file contains the following columns:
number: order of measurement
species: latin name of plant species measured
m_bb: slope from the Ball et al. (1985) model
se_bb: standard error for estimate of m_bb
m_leuning: slope from Leuning (1995) model
m_se_leuning: standard error for estimate of m_leuning
go_leuning
go_se_leuning: standard error for estimate of go_leuning
trait_id: primary key for identification in BETYdb (www.betydb.org), additional metadata available for trait available at www.betydb.org/traits/
The pavi_data.csv file contains the following columns:
trait: name of trait, with units
mean: mean of observations
n: number of observations
se: standard error (or conservative estimate of standard error, derived using calculations in [Supplement 2]).
citation: Author and year citation where first published (see below)
trait_id: primary key for identification in BETYdb (www.betydb.org), additional metadata available for trait available at www.betydb.org/traits/>
创建时间:
2016-08-10



