Increased leaf phosphorus (P) concentration improved the water-use efficiency (WUE) and drought tolerance of
regularly defoliated white clover plants by decreasing the rate of daily transpiration per unit leaf area in dry soil.
Night transpiration was around 17% of the total daily transpiration. The improved control of transpiration in the
high-P plants was associated with an increased individual leaf area and WUE that apparently resulted from net
photosynthetic assimilation rate being reduced less than the reductions in the transpiration (27% vs 58%). On the
other hand, greater transpiration from low-P plants was associated with poor stomatal control of transpirational
loss of water, less ABA in the leaves when exposed to dry soil, and thicker and smaller leaf size compared with
high-P leaves. The leaf P concentration was positively related with leaf ABA, and negatively with transpiration
rates, under dry conditions (P < 0.001). However, leaf ABA was not closely related to the transpiration rate,
suggesting that leaf P concentration has a greater influence than ABA on the transpiration rates.