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Poplar
2023, Issue 211, p. 21-28

Original scientific paper
DOI: 10.5937/topola2211021K
UDC: 582.623.2(497.11)

Proximity to riverbed influences physiological response of adult pedunculate oak trees


Lazar Kesić 1, Matjaž Čater 2,3, Saša Orlović 1, Bratislav Matović 1, Marko Stojanović 4, Mirjana Bojović 5*


1 University of Novi Sad, Institute of Lowland Forestry and Environment, Novi Sad, Republic of Serbia
2 Slovenian Forestry Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia
3 Mendel University, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Brno, Czech Republic
4 Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Brno, Czech Republic
5 Educons University, Faculty of Ecological Agriculture, Sremska Kamenica, Republic of Serbia

Corresponding author:
Mirjana Bojović, E-mail: mirjana.bojovic@educons.edu.rs


Abstract

The pedunculate oak (Quercus robur L.) is economically and ecologically one of the most significant tree species in Serbia, however, little is known about the influence of the riverbed distance and its water supply on ecophysiological responses of this species. Given the limited information on the light-response curve of photosynthesis for oaks in southwest Srem, Serbia, the aim of this paper is to enhance understanding of their ecophysiological responses in this context. Maximum assimilation rate (Amax), the quantum yield (Ф), and light compensation point (LCP) were compared in adult trees situated along the transect from the river: (1) close to the river, (2) intermediate, (3) farthest from the river, and (4) forest reserve (second closest), with the first three transects being managed forests and the last one being an unmanaged forest reserve. The measurements were conducted in July during the first evidence of drought. The highest Amax rates were measured in all light intensities on the site closest to the river and the smallest on the site that was most distant to the water source. The most efficient were trees close to the river and the ones in the forest reserve. No significant difference between compensation points was confirmed for the studied groups of trees, although the forest reserve trees showed slightly higher values. The results demonstrated clear response between transects, which followed the distance from the riverbed. Pedunculate oak's reliance on groundwater is in tight relation with ecophysiological processes in trees; groundwater depletion may threaten its survival in areas distant from the river.


Keywords: Quercus robur L., floodplain forest, drought, light-response curves, transects

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