# Was the evolution of faster stomata driven by increased gas exchange rates rather than increasing water use efficiency?

**Authors:** Robert A. Brench, Matthew J. Wilson, Sarah J. Thorne, Andrew J. Fleming, Julie E. Gray

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/nph.70830 · 2025-12-24

## TL;DR

The paper investigates whether faster stomatal responses evolved to improve gas exchange rather than water use efficiency in plants.

## Contribution

The study challenges the assumption that faster stomatal responses evolved for water use efficiency, suggesting instead they evolved for increased gas exchange rates.

## Key findings

- Species with dumbbell-shaped guard cells showed faster maximum rates of stomatal adjustment and larger changes in photosynthesis.
- No significant differences in stomatal opening time or water use efficiency were found between guard cell types.
- Increased gas exchange rates, not faster stomatal response times, are proposed as the evolutionary driver for dumbbell-shaped guard cells.

## Abstract

Following changes in light flux, photosynthesis (A) typically adjusts more quickly than stomatal conductance (g
s), which is dependent on changes in stomatal aperture. Faster stomatal responses are proposed to reduce water loss and enhance growth in dynamic light environments.Stomatal opening and closing parameters were determined in a range of species across the land plant phylogeny using infrared gas exchange analysis to monitor A and g
s, following step changes in light flux.The acquisition of abaxial stomata and dumbbell‐shaped guard cells in angiosperms coincides with two distinct increases in photosynthetic capacity. Species with dumbbell‐shaped guard cells achieved larger changes in A and faster maximum rates of g
s adjustment than species with kidney‐shaped guard cells. However, species with dumbbell‐shaped guard cells did not open or close their stomata in a significantly shorter time once opening began, nor did they achieve higher water use efficiency.Surprisingly, there were no strong correlations between stomatal size and speed parameters and no differences in biomass accumulation or water use between plants grown under constant or fluctuating light. We therefore propose increased gas‐exchange rates, rather than faster stomatal response times, as the evolutionary driver for the acquisition of dumbbell‐shaped guard cells.

Following changes in light flux, photosynthesis (A) typically adjusts more quickly than stomatal conductance (g
s), which is dependent on changes in stomatal aperture. Faster stomatal responses are proposed to reduce water loss and enhance growth in dynamic light environments.

Stomatal opening and closing parameters were determined in a range of species across the land plant phylogeny using infrared gas exchange analysis to monitor A and g
s, following step changes in light flux.

The acquisition of abaxial stomata and dumbbell‐shaped guard cells in angiosperms coincides with two distinct increases in photosynthetic capacity. Species with dumbbell‐shaped guard cells achieved larger changes in A and faster maximum rates of g
s adjustment than species with kidney‐shaped guard cells. However, species with dumbbell‐shaped guard cells did not open or close their stomata in a significantly shorter time once opening began, nor did they achieve higher water use efficiency.

Surprisingly, there were no strong correlations between stomatal size and speed parameters and no differences in biomass accumulation or water use between plants grown under constant or fluctuating light. We therefore propose increased gas‐exchange rates, rather than faster stomatal response times, as the evolutionary driver for the acquisition of dumbbell‐shaped guard cells.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** water (MESH:D014867)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12873517/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12873517