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“Introduction The efficiency with which plants fix CO2 relative to their rate of H2O loss is called water use efficiency (WUE), and when high, WUE can mitigate the tradeoff between CO2 uptake and H2O loss. In C3 plants, low stomatal conductance (g s) minimizes water loss (transpiration, E) and can be a rapid and effective strategy; however, it results in reduced CO2 uptake (A) and growth (Schulze 1986; Geber and Dawson 1997; Condon et al. 2002). Genetically based variation in WUE has been documented in both crops and non-cultivated species (McKay et al. 2003;
Hall et al. 2005). Physiologists mTOR kinase assay are interested in Telomerase intrinsic WUE (A/g s) as a tool for studying how the fundamental trade-off of losing water for gaining CO2 is regulated by stomatal and other physiological adjustments (Buckley and Mott 2002; Comstock 2002). Evolutionary biologists have studied variation in WUE as it is likely an important component of local adaptation (Donovan and Ehleringer 1994; Heschel et al. 2002; Geber and Griffen 2003; Caruso et al. 2005). Likewise, plant breeders have long considered WUE an important target (Passioura 1977). WUE can be estimated in a variety of ways at various spatio-temporal scales, including with lysimeter studies, gas exchange measurements, or stable carbon isotope composition. Tissue carbon isotope composition is an increasingly popular approach, and its advantages include integration over long periods of gas exchange and development, amenability to high throughput sampling, relatively low cost, and high heritability. Stable carbon isotope composition of leaves (δ13C) (the ratio of the amount of 13C to 12C isotopes in a sample relative to a standard), provides a time-integrated estimate of intrinsic WUE (Farquhar et al. 1989; Dawson et al. 2002).