Arid Zone Research ›› 2025, Vol. 42 ›› Issue (3): 480-488.doi: 10.13866/j.azr.2025.03.08

• Plant Ecology • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Variation and trade-offs in leaf functional traits of dominant desert plant species in Hexi Corridor

LI Shanjia1,2(), LI Laizhou1, MIAO Yingxiang1, GOU Wei1, SU Peixi2   

  1. 1. School of Life Science and Engineering, Lanzhou University of Technology, Lanzhou 730050, Gansu, China
    2. Key Laboratory of Land Surface Process and Climate Change in Cold and Arid Regions, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, Gansu, China
  • Received:2024-07-08 Revised:2024-11-18 Online:2025-03-15 Published:2025-03-17

Abstract:

The characteristics of variation in leaf functional traits of different plant types (shrubs, herbaceous plants) in Hexi Corridor and the relationships between these functional traits are extremely important for maintaining the stability of the ecosystem in this region. To explore the mechanisms of adaptation and the ecological strategies of different plant life forms in arid environments, we established survey sites in the eastern, central, and western sections along Hexi Corridor, following a gradient of decreasing natural precipitation from southeast to northwest. We selected 26 dominant desert plant species, including 14 shrubs and 12 herbaceous plants, and analyzed their variability and regional patterns of 14 key leaf functional traits. We also investigated the trade-offs and adaptive strategies among these traits. The following results were obtained: (1) The coefficient of variation for leaf-bound water content (BW), carbon to phosphorus ratio (C:P), plant height (H), and leaf free water content (FW) of dominant desert plant species in the Hexi Corridor exceeds 100%. (2) Plants in different regions of Hexi Corridor displayed diverse survival strategies: plants in the eastern section adopted a “slow-return” strategy, shrubs and herbaceous plants in the central section exhibited “slow-return” and “fast-return” strategies respectively, while shrubs in the western section adopted a “rapid resource acquisition” strategy under resource-rich conditions, and herbaceous plants adopted a “slow-return” strategy under unfavorable soil conditions. The survival strategies of plants are influenced by multiple ecological factors, and they adapt to arid environments through trait optimization and resource allocation.

Key words: desert plants, functional traits, leaf economics spectrum, Hexi Corridor