Growth Onset Rather Than Photosynthesis Strongly Regulates Autumn Senescence Termination Besides Climate Change
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2025-05
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Journal Article
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Abstract
Aim: Plant senescence largely influences the global carbon cycle by regulating the growing season length. However, the driving mechanisms of plant senescence remain unclear, particularly the role of developmental factors. This study aims to investigate how environmental and developmental factors drive autumn senescence and evaluate whether woody and herbaceous plants exhibit divergent responses to these drivers.
Location: Eurasia.
Time Period: 1982–2014.
Major Taxa Studied: Woody and herbaceous species.
Methods: Using 120,833 long-term ground phenological observations, we employed partial correlation analysis to investigate the influence of environmental and developmental factors on senescence termination. Experimental records from literature and pasture survey observations from China were separately utilised to further validate the influence of developmental factors on senescence termination. Structural equation modelling was applied to analyse the pathways of growth onset affecting senescence termination. Additionally, multiple linear regression was used to examine the tendency of the sensitivity of senescence termination to plant development rate.
Results: We find that earlier growth onset primarily leads to earlier senescence termination directly in herbaceous plants, but indirectly in woody plants by accelerating early-season development. The sensitivity of senescence termination to plant development rate shows a declining trend, particularly in early-season negative effects on woody plants and late-season positive effects on herbaceous plants, suggesting diminished impacts of future warming on senescence timing. The impact of growing season photosynthetic activity on senescence termination is not pronounced for both woody and herbaceous plants.
Main Conclusions: The results demonstrate that growth onset may affect woody and herbaceous senescence termination through different pathways, whereas the carry-over effects of growing season photosynthetic activity are not widely discovered. This emphasises that the introduction of developmental factors into phenological models needs to be considered carefully according to plant type.
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34 (5)
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Wiley
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Subject
global warming; growth onset; herbaceous plants; photosynthesis; plant senescence; woody plants