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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Morphophysiological Responses of Two Riparian Species Exposed to Water Restriction and Light Protection Conditions.

Year:
2026
Authors:
Peña-Rojas K et al.
Affiliation:
Faculty of Forestry and Nature Conservation

Abstract

Climate change has intensified summer drought and high solar radiation in Mediterranean ecosystems, generating abiotic stress that limits the establishment of riparian species. We conducted a nursery experiment to evaluate the effects of two levels of water availability and light intensity on the growth and physiological responses of two native riparian species from Mediterranean Chile: <i>Drimys winteri</i> and <i>Persea lingue</i>. A bi-factorial design combined two irrigation treatments (well-watered and water restriction) and two light intensity levels manipulated through a light protection treatment (20% shade mesh and full light exposure). Water restriction was applied gradually until 15-20% (<i>v</i>/<i>v</i>) substrate moisture, defined as maximum water restriction, followed by rehydration. Morphological variables (height, root collar diameter, and shoot-to-root ratio) and physiological traits (predawn water potential, chlorophyll fluorescence, and electron transport rate) were measured. Growth responses were affected by the light protection treatment, which promoted a significant height growth in both species. Water stress affected the global response of both species but they differed in their post-stress hydraulic recovery: <i>P. lingue</i> fully recovered its predawn water potential, whereas <i>Drimys winteri</i> did not. Our study provides measurable and quantifiable values that demonstrate the sensitivity of these species to water stress.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41600066