DROUGHT TOLERANCE OF CANDIDATE URBAN TREE SPECIES
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Date
2025-06-23
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Abstract
Global climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme events such as drought and the
effect is exacerbated in urban environment, threatning urban tree health and survival. In this study, we
conducted a pot experiment using 15 candidate urban tree species (267 trees in total) diverse in origin but
broadly categorized as native and exotic. Three treatment groups were established: control (regular
watering), moderate drought (short-term water withholding followed by rewatering), and extreme drought
(water withholding until visible leaf damage, then rewatering). Key physiological parameters were
measured every week at regular intervals throughout the experiment: photosynthetic rate, stomatal
conductance, chlorophyll fluorescence, and predawn and midday leaf water potentials. We examined
whether physiological traits decline in parallel or independently during drought, assessed recovery capacity
at different drought intensities, compared drought tolerance between native and exotic species, and
identified species-specific drought tolerance characteristics. Results revealed parallel declines in all
physiological parameters during both moderate and extreme drought, with decline severity increasing with
drought intensity and duration. Recovery patterns exhibited threshold behavior, with physiological
functions failing to recover after predawn leaf water potentials dropped below -2.3 Mpa and Fv/Fm below
4, indicating permanent/irreversible damage after the point. Thus, substantial recovery was observed in
moderately stressed trees while extremely stressed trees didn’t show any signs of recovery. Native species
were less sensitive to moderate drought than exotic species while the opposite was true under extreme
drought. Species-specific responses revealed Ostrya carpinifolia (European Hop-hornbeam) as consistently
drought-tolerant, while Koelreuteria paniculata (Goldenrain tree) demonstrated remarkable recovery
capacity despite intermediate drought sensitivity. Nyssa sylvatica (Black gum) and Acer saccharinum
(Silver maple) were consistently the most drought-sensitive species. Our findings highlight the complex,
coordinated nature of physiological responses to drought and the importance of considering both drought
resistance and recovery capacity when selecting urban tree species for climate resilience, particularly as
extreme drought events become more common under climate change.