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Quantifying the stomatal responses of plants to global change factors is crucial for modeling terrestrial carbon and water cycles. Here we synthesize worldwide experimental data to show that stomatal conductance (gs) decreases with elevated carbon dioxide (CO2), warming, decreased precipitation, and tropospheric ozone pollution, but increases with increased precipitation and nitrogen (N) deposition. These responses vary with treatment magnitude, plant attributes (ambient gs, vegetation biomes, and plant functional types), and climate. All two-factor combinations (except warming + N deposition) significantly reduce gs, and their individual effects are commonly additive but tend to be antagonistic as the effect sizes increased. We further show that rising CO2 and warming would dominate the future change of plant gs across biomes. The results of our meta-analysis provide a foundation for understanding and predicting plant gs across biomes and guiding manipulative experiment designs in a real world where global change factors do not occur in isolation.
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Xingyun Liang
South China Botanical Garden
Defu Wang
Shanxi Agricultural University
Qing Ye
National University of Defense Technology
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Nature Communications
Princeton University
California Institute of Technology
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Liang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d751c7086f9d6299f3071a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37934-7