首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Shoots from two ecologically different evergreen tree species, Picea abies (L.) Karst and Coffea liberica Hiern, were used to carry out pressure volume (PV) measurements at 5–35°C. For this purpose a pressure chamber was equipped with thermoelectric temperature regulation. The non-linear sections of the resultant PV curves were sigmoidal for both species, with recognizable points of inflexion. These points, at around ψ= 1.12 MPa and relative water content (RWC) = 88.5% for Picea and at ψ= 0.92 MPa and RWC = 95.5% for Coffea , were characterised by a temporary increase in the resistance to water flow of the entire shoot (R5).
The maximum value of the bulk modulus of elasticity (ɛ max) was also in the region of the point of inflexion. This value was considerably higher in Coffea than in Picea . The osmotic pressures at full water saturation (π0) and at turgor loss point (πp) showed a clear temperature dependence between 15 and 35°C differing only slightly from the theoretically expected situation. At 25°C these values were 1.72 and 2.48 MPa. respectively, for Picea and 1.58 and 1.87 MPa. respectively, for Coffea . The turgor loss point occurred at 76–77% RWC in Picea and at 86% RWC in Coffea , the proportion of apoplastic water varied between 22 and 25% in Picea but was only 9–10% in Coffea . The ecological differences between the two species are reflected in their temperature dependence for R5, which was much steeper for Coffea than for Picea . The energy of activation for the water conductance of the whole shoots was 13.0–14.4 kJ mol−1 in Picea and about 23 kJ mol−1 in Coffea .  相似文献   

2.
Genetic variation in the drought response of leaf and root tissue water relations of seedlings of eight sources of black walnut ( Juglans nigra L.) was investigated using the pressure-volume technique. Tissue water relations were characterized at three stages of a drying cycle during which well-watered plants were allowed to desiccate and then were reirrigated.
Sources varied both in the capacity for and degree of leaf and root osmotic adjustment, and in the mechanism by which it was achieved. A decrease in osmotic potential at the turgor loss point (ψπp) of 0.4 MPa was attributable to increased leaf tissue elasticity in seedlings of four sources, while seedlings of an Ontario source exhibited a 0.7–0.8 MPa decline in ψπp as a result of both increased solute content and increased leaf tissue elasticity. Seedlings of a New York source showed no detectable osmotic adjustment.
In roots, decreased ψπp (osmotic potential at full hydration) and ψπp were observed under drought. Sources that exhibited significant leaf osmotic adjustment also generally showed a similar response in roots. Tissue elasticity and ψπp of roots were higher than those of shoots, whereas ψπp of the two organs was similar for most sources. Because of greater elasticity, roots exhibited a more gradual decline in turgor and total water potential than did leaves as tissue relative water content decreased.  相似文献   

3.
Using the pressure volume analysis (PV analysis) on the shoots of Norway spruce (Picea abies [L.] Karst.) and the here presented capillary microcryoscopy of the needle press sap of the same shoots, it was possible to determine the amount of apoplastic water in the needles (Wan) as well as in the defoliated shoots (Was). Additionally, the bulk osmotic pressure at full water saturation in the symplast of the needles and defoliated shoots (πon and πos) was determined. The dependence of the bulk-averaged turgor pressure (Pt) on the water content and the relationship between the bulk modulus of elasticity of the needles (?n) and the bulk-averaged needle turgor pressure (Ptn) was shown with help of the PV analysis on the whole shoots and defoliated shoots. The study was conducted at the end of the vegetation period in 1987 and during winter 1988. The proportion of Wan in the total needle water content (Wtn) was 14% in September 1987 and 12.5% in March 1988. The respective percentage of Was in Wts were 27% and 25%. The amount of apoplastic water depended on the ratio of the dry weight of defoliated shoots to the dry weight of the whole shoots. A standard mean value for the amount of Wan in the total water content of the shoots (Wt) was therefore not possible. The bulk osmotic pressure at full water saturation in the needle symplasts was –1.9 MPa in September 1987 and –2.2 MPa in winter 1988. The respective values of the bulk osmotic pressures in the symplast of the defoliated shoots (πos) were –1.5 MPa and –1.7 MPa. Thus πon was 0.1 MPa lower and πos 0.3–0.4 MPa higher than the average osmotic pressure during full water saturation in the symplast of the whole shoots (πo). The relation between bulk-averaged turgor pressure and water content showed that during water loss Ptn dropped more rapidly than the turgor pressure of defoliated shoots (Pts). Consequently the needles were less elastic than the defoliated shoots. The turgor values of whole shoots followed an intemediate course between Ptn and Pts. The flat course of Pts seems to be the main reason for the often observed “plateau” of ψ-isotherms of whole shoots near full turgor.  相似文献   

4.
Pressure-volume curves and drought resistance in two wheat genotypes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The water relations of two durum wheat cultivars ( Triticum durum Desf.) were studied throughout the growing season. Irrigated and unirrigated plants were compared from booting to milk stage; a period where water stress occurred naturally in the field. Modulus of elasticity (ε), turgid weight/dry weight ratio (TW/DW), relative water content at zero turgor (RWCo) and osmotic potential at full turgor (ε) declined throughout the season while average turgor (ψp) increased. Water stress induced a further decrease in ψπ100 and the TW/DW ratio. The elastic modulus varied greatly. During the first stages of growth, cv. Appulo (the more resistant cultivar) showed lower ε values than cv. Valforte. At the milk stage, ε was lower for the unirrigated than the irrigated plants. Correlation coefficients between the TW/DW ratio and the osmotic potential were significant for both cultivars. In cv. Valforte, TW/DW was also correlated with the average turgor and the bulk modulus of elasticity. Structural changes that affect the TW/DW ratio seem to be important factors influencing water relations and drought tolerance in durum wheat.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract. Measurements of the water-relation parameters of the giant subepidermal cells (volume, V = 0.119 to 1.658 mm3; = 0.53±0.35 mm3, SD, n = 23) and the smaller mesocarp parenchyma cells ( V = 0.10 to 0.79×10−3 mm3; = 0.36±0.27×10−3 mm3, SD, n = 6) of the inner pericarp surface of Capsicum annuum L. were made using the Jülich pressure probe. The volumetric elastic modulus ɛ for the large cells was between 1.5 and 27 MPa for a pressure range of 0.09 to 0.41 MPa. For the small cells ɛ was 0.1 to 0.6 MPa for a pressure range of 0.22 to 0.39 MPa. The turgor pressure P , the half-time of water exchange T 1/2, and the hydraulic conductivity L p were as follows, with SD and number of replicates: large cells, P = 0.27±0.06 MPa (23), T 1/2=2.7±2.2 s (46), L p=5.8±3.7 pm s−1 Pa (46); small cells, P = 0.33±0.07 MPa (6), T 1/2= 33±10s (12), L p=0.21±0.07 pm s−1 Pa−1 (12). The determination of these basic water-relation parameters is considered as a prerequisite for future ecotoxicological and phytopathological studies. The differences between the large and the small cells are discussed in relation to a desirable biophysical definition of succulence. Further, for the large cells a pressure and volume dependence of ɛ was demonstrated.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract. Osmotic adjustment, a mechanism whereby plants maintain positive turgor despite low water potential (ψ), was investigated in pearl millet ( Pennisetum americanum [L.] Leeke) in three types of field experiment at Hyderabad, India:
  • (1)

    Osmotic adjustment during the growing season was evaluated by comparing solute potential (ψs) of leaves taken at midday from irrigated and droughted plots and allowed to rehydrate in the laboratory. The degree of seasonal adjustment was also estimated by comparing observed values of ψs in the field with those expected if ψs decreased solely in proportion to water loss. Both types of assessment indicated the maximum seasonal adjustment to be about 0.2 MPa. The cultivars BJ 104 and Serere 39 differed in their capacity to adjust osmotically over the season; Serere 39 was least able to osmoregulate.

  • (2)

    Measurements of diurnal variations in ψ and ψs in BJ 104 revealed osmotic adjustment during the afternoon hours. At a given value of ψ, turgor (ψp) was about 0.1 MPa higher in irrigated, and over 0.2 MPa higher in droughted plants, in the afternoon, than in the morning.

  • (3)

    Osmotic adjustment of different leaves within the canopy was investigated. Upper leaves had lower ψ than basal leaves. Differences in ψ were matched by gradients in ψs, so that turgor was similar for all leaf layers.

  相似文献   

7.
Abstract. Portulacaria afra (L.) Jacq. is a perennial facultative CAM species showing a seasonal shift from C3 to CAM photosynthesis. The shift to CAM during the summer occurs despite continued irrigation of the plants. The authors examined the hypothesis that the seasonal shift to CAM occurred because of low transient water potentials. They measured changes in whole leaf water, osmotic and pressure potentials over the course of the shift. They also studied changes in enzyme activity to ascertain if PEP carboxylase and PEP carboxykinase were induced during the seasonal shift to CAM. Water potentials were high, from -0.1 to -0.5 MPa, predawn and midday, when the C3 pathway of photosynthesis was utilized. Osmotic potentials were constant, from -0.7 to - 0.8 MPa, indicating very little change in turgor. P. afra shifted to CAM indicated by large diurnal acid fluctuations (300 400 meq m−2) despite C3-like predawn water potentials. Midday water potentials usually decreased 0.2-0.7 MPa, while the osmotic potential remained unchanged or decreased slightly. Thus, a midday loss of turgor was associated with the use of the CAM pathway. The results support the hypothesis that the induction of CAM occurred due to low transient water potentials and may be partially mediated through the loss of turgor. The shift to CAM is only a partial induction with PEP carboxykinase showing high activity all year round while PEP carboxylase increases three-to five-fold over C3 levels. Relatively high levels of CAM enzyme activity enables the utilization of the CAM pathway in the winter and spring in response to high daytime temperatures and increased evaporative demand. These results would lead to an increase in water use efficiency during such periods when compared to other inducible CAM species.  相似文献   

8.
S. J. Colombo  Y. Teng 《Oecologia》1992,92(3):410-415
Seasonal variation in water relations of 3-yearold white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) shoots, monitored with pressure-volume curves over 28 months, was closely related to shoot phenology and was sensitive to environmental fluctuations during both summer growth and winter dormancy. Turgor maintenance capacity was lowest during rapid shoot elongation from late May to early July; this was indicated by the lowest total turgor pressures, the highest (least negative) osmotic potentials at full turgor and the turgor loss point, the smallest differences between osmotic potentials at full turgor and the turgor loss point, the highest relative water contents at turgor loss and a linear decline in cell elasticity with decreasing turgor pressure. This suggests that the high susceptibility of white spruce seedlings to growth check after transplanting is largely attributable to the poor turgor maintenance capacity of this species in early summer.  相似文献   

9.
Seasonal and diurnal measurements of leaf water potential (ψ1), relative water content (RWC) and stomatal conductance (gs) were made in the field on 19-year old Prunus salicina (L.) cv. Santa Rosa, a deciduous fruit tree species, irrigated with 3 different concentrations of saline water over a 3 year period (1985-1987). With the exception of stage III of fruit growth, little or no treatment difference in Φ1, leaf turgor potential (Φp), or RWC was noted during the day. Seasonal averages of morning (0700-0900) and afternoon (1500-1700) Φp did not decline with increasing salinity, indicating long-term osmotic adjustment in this species. Maintenance of leaf water status under saline conditions was in part a consequence of increased stomatal closure, with a subsequent reduction in leaf transpiration rate. However, during stage III of fruit growth, an increase in mean afternoon (1200-1700) stomatal conductance of 26-117%, independent of salinity treatment, was observed in 1985 and again in 1987. Higher conductance values during this period may be associated with rapid fruit expansion and greater assimilate demand. The observed increase in conductance resulted in greater leaf water loss and larger measured differences in midday ψ1 between salinity treatments. This research indicates that for Prunus salicina in the field, salinity stress resulted in leaf water deficits only during the final period of fruit expansion and ripening.  相似文献   

10.
Salinity response of a freshwater charophyte, Chara vulgaris   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Abstract. Chara vulgaris L. growing in an oligohaline lake was adapted to laboratory conditions and subjected to long-term salinity treatments ranging from 0 to 350 mol m 3 NaCl added to the lake water (40–680 mosmol kg 1). Osmotic potential and concentration of the main osmotically active solutes (K+, Na+, Mg2+, Cl and sucrose) in the vacuolar sap of the central internodal cells were estimated. C. vulgaris did regulate turgor but incompletely. Turgor decreased from 335 mosmol kg 1 under control conditions to 52–111 mosmol kg 1 at 350 mol m 3 NaCl. The enhancement of πi was achieved by increase in both ions and sucrose. Sterile and fertile plants differed in their response to osmotic stress. In sterile plants, the ions accounted for about 87% of the vacuolar osmotic potential. The increase of πi under osmotic stress was exclusively due to an accumulation of Na+ and Cl-. In fertile plants, sucrose accounted for about 35% of πi and ions for about 51% Under osmotic stress, sucrose content increased together with the ionic content of Na+ and Cl-.  相似文献   

11.
Bean plantlets ( Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Topcrop) were stressed at the age of 16–18 days by gradual (2–8%) or abrupt addition of 6% (w/v) polyethylene glycol Mw 6000 (PEG 6000) to Hoagland solution. Leaf conductance, photosynthesis, internal CO2 partial pressure (Ci), relative water content (RWC), water content/dry weight (H2O/DW), apoplastic PEG concentrations and weight of leaves, stems and roots were determined. Leaf conductance, photosynthesis and Ci were determined on non-detached primary leaves, and leaf potentials (water, osmotic and turgor potentials) were investigated in freshly detached (non-rehydrated) primary leaves, both in treated and control plants; RWC and osmotic potential were also assessed at the null turgor point. Low PEG 6000 concentrations induced early and evident decrease in leaf conductance and photosynthesis, whereas Ci decreased only moderately and tended to recover during advanced stress. There were moderate though significant decreases in RWC and H2O/DW, no change or increases in water potential, no significant changes in osmotic potential and a moderate but significant increase in turgor potential. Even when referred to null turgor point, RWC significantly decreased and osmotic potential was unchanged. It was concluded that apoplastic PEG 6000 accumulation at evaporating sites would account for the early decrease in conductance which would also justify the unchanged or the prevalent increase in water potential and turgor potential. The subsequent PEG diffusion and concentration in the leaf apoplastic water would have induced the RWC and H2O/DW decrease and the final turgor flexion documented.  相似文献   

12.
Leaf Diffusive Conductance and Tap Root Cell Turgor Pressure of Sugarbeet   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Abstract. The interrelationships of leaf diffusive conductance, tap root cell turgor pressure and the diameter of the tap root of sugarbeet were studied. The study was conducted on well-watered plants growing in pots under artificial light in the glasshouse. In a typical experiment, on illumination (400 μmol m−2 s−1) leaf conductance increased from 0.6 to 7.4 mm s−1. Cell turgor pressure in the tap root decreased from 0.8 MPa to 0.45 MPa and the root diameter (9.0 cm) contracted by 145μm. Removal of light resulted in the reversal of each of the above parameters to their previous values. Quantitively similar results were obtained when sugar beet plants were uprooted and the response of each of the parameters was measured. The sequence of events however was different. On stimulation by light, changes in leaf diffusive conductance preceded the turgor and root diameter changes (which were simultaneous) by some 15–20min. In contrast, on uprooting the simultaneous changes in root turgor pressure and diameter preceded the changes in leaf conductance. The lag times between changes in diffusive conductance and turgor pressure in the root were between 20 and 30 min.
Tap root turgor pressure and diameter correlated strongly and permitted the calculation of an apparent whole root volumetric elastic modules (55–63 MPa). The small changes in tissue volume relative to the transpiration rate suggest that the tap root is not a significant source of transpirational water during the day.  相似文献   

13.
Cultivated tomato Lycopersicon esculentum (L.) Mill. cv. P-73 and its wild salt-tolerant relative L. pennellii (Correll) D'Arcy accession PE-47 growing on silica sand in a growth chamber were exposed to 0, 70, 140 and 210 m M NaCl nutrient solutions 35 days after sowing. The saline treatments were imposed for 4 days, after which the plants were rinsed with distilled water. Salinity in L. esculentum reduced leaf area and leaf and shoot dry weights. The reductions were more pronounced when sodium chloride was removed from the root medium. Reduction in leaf area and weight in L. pennellii was only observed after the recovery period. In both genotypes salinity induced a progressive reduction in leaf water potential and leaf conductance. During the recovery period leaf water potential (ψ1) and leaf conductance (g1) reached levels similar to those of control plants in wild and cultivated species, respectively. Leaf osmotic potential at full turgor (ψos) decreased in the salt treated plants of both genotypes, whereas the bulk modulus of elasticity was not affected by salinity. Leaf water potential at turgor loss point (ψtlp) and relative water content at turgor loss point (RWCtlp) appeared to be controlled by leaf osmotic potential at full turgor (ψos) and by bulk modulus of elasticity, respectively. At lowest salinity, the wild species carried out the osmotic adjustment based almost exclusively on Cl and Na+, with a marked energy savings. Under highest salinity, this species accommodate the stress through a higher expenditure of energy due to the contribution of organic solutes to the osmotic adjustment. The domesticated species carried out the osmotic adjustment based always on an important contribution of organic solutes.  相似文献   

14.
Sequence of drought response of maize seedlings in drying soil   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Leaf elongation in monocotyledonous plants is sensitive to drought. To better understand the sequence of events in plants subjected to soil drying, leaf elongation and transpiration of maize seedlings ( Zea mays L.) of 4 cultivars were monitored continuously and the diurnal courses of the root and leaf water relations were determined. Results from this study indicate the following sequence of drought response: Leaf elongation decreased before changes in the leaf water relations of non‐growing zones of leaf blades were detected and before transpiration decreased. Reductions in leaf elongation preceded changes in the root water potential (ψw). Root ψw was not a very sensitive indicator of soil dryness, whereas the root osmotic potential (ψs) and root turgor (ψp) were more sensitive indicators. The earliest events observed in drying soil were a significant increase in the largest root diameter class (1 720 to 1 960 gm) and a decrease in leaf elongation ( P = 0.08) 2 days after withholding water. Significant increases in root length were observed 2 days later. Soil drying increased the number of fine roots with diameters of <240 µm. Slight increases in soil strength did not affect leaf elongation in the drying soil.  相似文献   

15.
The tepary bean ( Phaseolus acutifolius Gray var. latifolius ), a drought resistant species, was compared under water stress conditions with the more drought susceptible P. vulgaris L. cvs Pinto and White Half Runner (WHR). In order to better understand the basis for the superior drought resistance of tepary, this study was designed to determine the relationships among leaf water potential, osmotic potential, turgor potential, and relative water content (RWC).
Plants were prestressed by withholding irrigation water. These stress pretreatments changed the relation between leaf water potential and relative water content of both species so that prestressed plants had lower water potentials than controls at the same leaf RWC. Tepary had lower water potentials at given RWC levels than Pinto or WHR; this can account for part of the superior resistance of tepary. In all genotypes, prestressed plants maintained osmotic potentials approximately 0.2 MPa lower than controls. Tepary reached osmotic potentials that were significantly lower (0.15 to 0.25 MPa) than Pinto or WHR. Both control and prestressed tepary plants had 0.05 to 0.25 MPa more turgor than Pinto or WHR at RWC values between 65 and 80%. Both prestressed and control tepary plants had greater elasticity (a lower elastic modulus) than Pinto or WHR. This greater turgor of tepary at low RWC values could be caused by several factors including greater tissue elasticity, active accumulation of solutes, or greater solute concentration.
Tepary had significantly lower osmotic potentials than the P. vulgaris cultivars, but there was little difference in osmotic potential between Pinto and WHR. Knowledge of differences in osmotic and turgor potentials among and within species could be useful in breeding for drought resistance in Phaseolus.  相似文献   

16.
Cultivated tomato Lycopersicon esculentum (L.) Mill. cv. P-73 and its wild salt tolerant relative L. pennellii (Correll) D'Arcy accession PE-47, were grown during spring-summer 1989 under unheated plastic greenhouse conditions. Plants were submitted to two different salt treatments using 0 and 140 mM NaCI irrigation water. In both tomato species, salinity caused a proportionally larger reduction in leaf area than in leaf weight and, in L. esculentum , a proportionally larger decrease in stem weight than in leaf weight. Daily variations in leaf water potential (Ψ1) were fundamentally due to changes in the evaporative demand of the atmosphere. Reductions in Ψ1 due to salinity were consistent only in L. esculentum . In all the conditions studied, leaf turgor was maintained. Leaf conductance (g1)was higher in L. esculentum than in L. pennellii .Salinity induced a clear reduction in g1 levels in L. esculentum whereas, in L. pennellii , this reduction was noted only in May. In both species the Ψos (leaf osmotic potential at full turgor) levels were reduced by salinity. The bulk modulus of elasticity (E) and relative water content at turgor loss point (RWCtlp) were not affected by salinity. The RWCtlp values in L. pennellii seem to be controlled by E values.  相似文献   

17.
To determine how tissue water relations vary and contribute to turgor maintenance in species from contrasting ecological zones, seedlings of jack pine ( Pinus banksiana Lamb.), black spruce ( Picea mariana [Mill] B.S.P.) and flooded gum ( Eucalyptus grandis W. Hill ex Maiden) were subjected to an 8 day drought stress by water withholding with and without prior mild water stress conditioning. Jack pine, a deep-rooted species from dry, sandy boreal sites, lost turgor at the lowest relative water content (75–65%) and water potential, and had lowest maximum bulk elastic modulus (Emax of 5.2–5.8 MPa). Although this suggests a high inherent dehydration tolerance, jack pine did not further adjust its elasticity when repeatedly stressed. Black spruce, a shallow-rooted species from predominantly moist sites in the boreal region, lost turgor at intermediate relative water content (86–76%) and water potential, but could adjust its elasticity to maintain turgor in repeatedly stressed tissues. Flooded gum, a deep-rooted species from moist, warm temperate-subtropical regions, had a low inherent drought tolerance since it lost turgor at higher relative water content (88–84%) and water potential, but was capable of some adjustment when the stress was repeated. Elastic adjustment (<3.7 MPa) was more important for turgor maintenance than osmotic adjustment (<0.13 MPa), which was statistically nonsignificant. Maximum bulk modulus of elasticity, but not osmotic potentials at full turgor, was significantly correlated with the relative water content and water potential at zero turgor in droughted seedlings. These results highlight the importance of tissue shrinkage for dehydration tolerance. Both the inherent capacity for turgor maintenance of a species under drought and its ability to adjust to repeated drought should be considered in genetic selections for drought tolerance.  相似文献   

18.
We determined whether increase in cold hardiness of Rhododendron cv. Catawbiense Boursault induced by water stress was correlated with changes in tissue water relations. Water content of the growing medium was either maintained near field capacity for the duration of the study or plants were subjected to drought episodes at different times between 15 July and 19 February. Watering during a drought episode was delayed until soil water content decreased below 0.4 m3 m−3 then watering was resumed at a level to maintain soil water content between 0.3 and 0.4 m3 m−3. Cold hardiness was evaluated in the laboratory with freeze tolerance tests on detached leaves. Water relations parameters were determined using pressure-volume analysis. Exposure to drought episodes increased cold hardiness during the cold acclimation stage in late summer and fall but not during the winter. When water-stressed plants were re-watered to field capacity, the previous gain in cold hardiness gradually disappeared. Water relations parameters correlating with seasonal changes of cold hardiness included dry matter content (r =−0.67). apoplastic water content (r =−0.60), and water potential at the turgor loss point (r = 0.40). Changes of cold hardiness in water-stressed plants in reference to well-watered plants were correlated with changes of all water relations parameters, except for osmotic potential at full turgor (r = 0.13). It is proposed that water stress reduced the hydration of cell walls, thereby increasing their rigidity. Increased rigidity of cell walls could result in a development of greater negative turgor pressures at subfreezing temperatures and therefore increased resistance to freeze dehydration.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Water storage and nocturnal increases in osmotic pressure affect the water relations of the desert succulent Ferocactus acanthodes, which was studied using an electrical circuit analog based on the anatomy and morphology of a representative individual. Transpiration rates and osmotic pressures over a 24-h period were used as input variables. The model predicted water potential, turgor pressure and water flow for various tissues. Plant capacitances, storage resistances and nocturnal increases in osmotic pressure were varied to determine their role in the water relations of this dicotyledonous succulent. Water coming from storage tissues contributed about one-third of the water transpired at night: the majority of this water came from the nonphotosynthetic, water storage parenchyma of the stem. Time lags of 4 h were predicted between maximum transpiration and maximum water uptake from the soil. Varying the capacitance of the plant caused proportional changes in osmotically driven water movement but changes in storage resistance had only minor effects. Turgor pressure in the chlorenchyma depended on osmotic pressure, but was fairly insensitive to doubling or halving of the capacitance or storage resistance of the plant. Water uptake from the soil was only slightly affected by osmotic pressure changes in the chlorenchyma. For this stem succulent, the movement of water from the chlorenchyma to the xylem and the internal redistribution of water among stem tissues were dominated by nocturnal changes in chlorenchyma osmotic pressure, not by transpiration.  相似文献   

20.
Because iso‐ and anisohydric species differ in stomatal regulation of the rate and magnitude of fluctuations in shoot water potential, they may be expected to show differences in the plasticity of their shoot water relations components, but explicit comparisons of this nature have rarely been made. We subjected excised shoots of co‐occurring anisohydric Juniperus monosperma and isohydric Pinus edulis to pressure‐volume analysis with and without prior artificial rehydration. In J. monosperma, the shoot water potential at turgor loss (ΨTLP) ranged from ?3.4 MPa in artificially rehydrated shoots to ?6.6 MPa in shoots with an initial Ψ of ?5.5 MPa, whereas in P. edulis mean ΨTLP remained at ~ ?3.0 MPa over a range of initial Ψ from ?0.1 to ?2.3 MPa. The shoot osmotic potential at full turgor and the bulk modulus of elasticity also declined sharply with shoot Ψ in J. monosperma, but not in P. edulis. The contrasting behaviour of J. monosperma and P. edulis reflects differences in their capacity for homeostatic regulation of turgor that may be representative of aniso‐ and isohydric species in general, and may also be associated with the greater capacity of J. monosperma to withstand severe drought.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号