Abstract: | This study compared the abilities of two cool-season bunchgrasses to extract moisture from a drying soil and compared photosynthetic and stomatal responses of the two species as soil moisture supplies were depleted. When grown in 49-L pots in a greenhouse, Leymus cinereus extracted more water from the soil and maintained higher gas exchange rates to lower absolute amounts of soil water than did Agropyron desertorum . The soil water content at the lower limit of extraction was 10.3% for L. cinereus and 13.3% for A. desertorum . When soil moisture was expressed as extractable soil water, there was little difference between the species in pattern of water use. Both species maintained high stomatal conductances (g w ) and photosynthetic rates (A) until extractable soil moisture was reduced to about 15%. For field-grown plants under severe water stress, A was higher in L. cinereus than in A. desertorum at comparable leaf water potentials. The relationship between A and g w was similar for the two species; higher A in L. cinereus was a consequence of higher g w . Thus, higher A in L. cinereus is achieved through some sacrifice of water-use efficiency. |