Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Curr Opin Plant Biol. 2010 Jun;13(3):233-40. doi: 10.1016/j.pbi.2010.04.013.
Stomata have played a key role in the Earth System for at least 400 million years. By enabling plants to control the rate of evaporation from their photosynthetic organs, stomata helped to set in motion non-linear processes that led to an acceleration of the hydrologic cycle over the continents and an expansion of climate zones favorable for plant life. Global scale modeling of land-atmosphere interactions provides a way to explore parallels between the influence of vegetation on climate over time, and the influence of spatial and temporal variation in the activities of vegetation in the current Earth System on climate and weather. We use the logic in models that simulate land-atmosphere interactions to illustrate the central role played by stomatal conductance in the Earth System. In the modeling context, most of the activities of plants and their manifold interactions with their genomes and with the environment are communicated to the atmosphere through a single property: the aperture or conductance of their stomata. We tend to think of the controls on vegetation responses in the real world as being distributed among factors such as seasonal patterns of growth, the changing availability of soil water, or changes in light intensity and leaf water potential over a day. However, the impact of these controls on crucial exchanges of energy and water vapor with the atmosphere are also largely mediated by stomata. The decisions 'made by' stomata emerge as an important and inadequately understood component of these models. At the present time we lack effective ways to link advances in the biology of stomata to this decision making process. While not unusual, this failure to connect between disciplines, introduces uncertainty in modeling studies being used to predict weather and climate change and ultimately to inform policy decisions. This problem is also an opportunity.
气孔在地球系统中至少发挥了 4 亿年的关键作用。通过使植物能够控制其光合器官的蒸发速率,气孔有助于启动非线性过程,导致大陆水文循环加速和有利于植物生存的气候带扩张。陆地-大气相互作用的全球尺度建模提供了一种方法,可以探索植被对气候的影响随时间的变化与当前地球系统中植被活动的时空变化对气候和天气的影响之间的相似之处。我们使用模拟陆地-大气相互作用的模型中的逻辑来说明气孔导度在地球系统中所起的核心作用。在建模环境中,植物的大部分活动及其与基因组和环境的多种相互作用,都是通过单个特性传递给大气的:它们的气孔开度或导度。我们倾向于认为,在现实世界中,对植被响应的控制因素分布在季节性生长模式、土壤水分的变化可用性、或一天中光强度和叶片水势的变化等因素之间。然而,这些控制因素对与大气的能量和水蒸气关键交换的影响也在很大程度上受到气孔的调节。这些控制因素的决策“由”气孔做出,成为这些模型的一个重要且理解不足的组成部分。目前,我们缺乏将气孔生物学的进展与这一决策过程联系起来的有效方法。虽然这种学科之间的脱节并不罕见,但它会给用于预测天气和气候变化并最终为政策决策提供信息的建模研究带来不确定性。这个问题也是一个机会。