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1.
Almond plants (Amygdalus communis L. cv. Garrigues) were grown in the field under drip irrigated and non irrigated conditions. Leaf water potential () and leaf conductance (g1) were determined at three different times of the growing season (spring, summer and autumn). The relationships between and g1 in both treatments showed a continuous decrease of g1 as decreased in spring and summer. Data from the autumn presented a threshold value of (approx. –2.7 MPa in dry treatment, and approx. –1.4 MPa in wet treatment) below which leaf conductance remained constant.  相似文献   

2.
Turgor (p) and osmotic potential (s) in epidermal and mesophyll cells, in-situ xylem water potential (-xyl) and gas exchange were measured during changes of air humidity and light in leaves ofTradescantia virginiana L., Turgor of single cells was determined using the pressure probe. Sap of individual cells was collected with the probe for measuring the freezing-point depression in a nanoliter osmometer. Turgor pressure was by 0.2 to 0.4 MPa larger in mesophyll cells than in epidermal cells. A water-potential gradient, which was dependent on the rate of transpiration, was found between epidermis and mesophyll and between tip and base of the test leaf. Step changes of humidity or light resulted in changes of epidermal and mesophyll turgor (p-epi, p-mes) and could be correlated with the transpiration rate. Osmotic potential was not affected by a step change of humidity or light. For the humidity-step experiments, stomatal conductance (g) increased with increasing epidermal turgor.g/p-epi appeared to be constant over a wide range of epidermal turgor pressures. In light-step experiments this type of response was not found and stomatal conductance could increase while epidermal turgor decreased.Symbols E transpiration - g leaf conductance - w leaf/air vapour concentration difference - -epi water potential of epidermal cells - -mes water potential of mesophyll cells - -xyl water potential of xylem - p-epi turgor pressure of epidermal cells - p-mes turgor pressure of mesophyll cells - s-epi osmotic potential of epidermal cells - s-mes osmotic potential of mesophyll cells  相似文献   

3.
Summary Solute osmotic potentials (x) in the vessels of hydroponically grown maize roots were measured to assess the osmotic-xylem-sap mechanism for generating root pressure (indicated by guttation). Solutes in vessels were measured in situ by X-ray microanalysis of plants frozen intact while guttating. Osmotic potentials outside the roots (o) were changed by adding polyethylene glycol to the nutrient solution. Guttation rate fell when o was decreased, but recovered towards the control value during 3–5 days when o was greater than or equal to –0.3 MPa, but not when o was equal to –0.4 MPa. In roots stressed to o = –0.3 MPa, x, was always more positive than o, and x changed only slightly (ca. 0.05 MPa). Thus the adjustment in the roots which increased root pressure cannot be ascribed to x, contradicting the osmotic-xylem-sap mechanism. An alternative driving force was sought in the osmotic potentials of the vacuoles of the living cells (v), which were analysed by microanalysis and estimated by plasmolysis. v showed larger responses to osmotic stress (0.1 MPa). Some plants were pretreated with abundant KNO3 in the nutrient solution. These plants showed very large adjustments in v (0.4 MPa) but little change in x (0.08 MPa). They guttated by 4 h after o was lowered to –0.4 MPa. It is argued that turgor pressure of the living cells is a likely alternative source of root pressure. Published evidence for high solute concentrations in the xylem sap is critically assessed.Abbreviations o external water potential - x osmotic potential of xylem sap - v osmotic potential of vacuolar sap - EDX energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis - CSEM cryo-scanning electron microscope - LN2 liquid nitrogen - PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

4.
A new guillotine thermocouple psychrometer was used to make continuous measurements of water potential before and after the excision of elongating and mature regions of darkgrown soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) stems. Transpiration could not occur, but growth took place during the measurement if the tissue was intact. Tests showed that the instrument measured the average water potential of the sampled tissue and responded rapidly to changes in water potential. By measuring tissue osmotic potential ( s ), turgor pressure ( p ) could be calculated. In the intact plant, s and p were essentially constant for the entire 22 h measurement, but s was lower and p higher in the elongating region than in the mature region. This caused the water potential in the elongating region to be lower than in the mature region. The mature tissue equilibrated with the water potential of the xylem. Therefore, the difference in water potential between mature and elongating tissue represented a difference between the xylem and the elongating region, reflecting a water potential gradient from the xylem to the epidermis that was involved in supplying water for elongation. When mature tissue was excised with the guillotine, s and p did not change. However, when elongating tissue was excised, water was absorbed from the xylem, whose water potential decreased. This collapsed the gradient and prevented further water uptake. Tissue p then decreased rapidly (5 min) by about 0.1 MPa in the elongating tissue. The p decreased because the cell walls relaxed as extension, caused by p , continued briefly without water uptake. The p decreased until the minimum for wall extension (Y) was reached, whereupon elongation ceased. This was followed by a slow further decrease in Y but no additional elongation. In elongating tissue excised with mature tissue attached, there was almost no effect on water potential or p for several hours. Nevertheless, growth was reduced immediately and continued at a decreasing rate. In this case, the mature tissue supplied water to the elongating tissue and the cell walls did not relax. Based on these measurements, a theory is presented for simultaneously evaluating the effects of water supply and water demand associated with growth. Because wall relaxation measured with the psychrometer provided a new method for determining Y and wall extensibility, all the factors required by the theory could be evaluated for the first time in a single sample. The analysis showed that water uptake and wall extension co-limited elongation in soybean stems under our conditions. This co-limitation explains why elongation responded immediately to a decrease in the water potential of the xylem and why excision with attached mature tissue caused an immediate decrease in growth rate without an immediate change in p Abbreviations and symbols L tissue conductance for water - m wall extensibility - Y average yield threshold (MPa) - o water potential of the xylem - p turgor pressure - s osmotic potential - w water potential of the elon gating tissue  相似文献   

5.
Phloem-sap composition was studied in plants of Ricinus communis L. grown on a waterculture medium. The sap possessed a relatively high K+:Na+ ratio and low levels of Ca2+ and free H+. Sucrose and K+ (together with its associated anions) accounted for 75% of the phloem-sap solute potential (s). In plants kept in continuous darkness, a decrease in phloem-sap sucrose levels over 24h was accompanied by an increase in K+ levels. Measurements of phloem-sap s and xylem water potential () indicated that this resulted in a partial maintenance of phloem turgor pressure p. In darkness there was also a marked decrease in the malate content of the leaf tissue, and it is possible that organic carbon from this source was mobilized for export in the phloem. The results support the concept of the phloem sap as a symplastic phase. We interpret the increase in K+ levels in the phloem in darkness as an osmoregulatory response to conditions of restricted solute availability. This reponse can be explained on the basis of the sucrose-H+ co-transport mechanism of phloem loading.Abbreviations water potential - s solute potential - p pressure potential  相似文献   

6.
Effects of water-stress treatment of Zea mays L. plants on protoplast volume and photosynthesis in leaf slices exposed to solutions of different osmotic potential ( s) were studied. Decreased photosynthetic capacity in the leaf slices at low tissue w was associated with dehydration-induced protoplast-volume reduction. Leaf slices from plants exposed to in-situ water deficits exhibited greater photosynthetic capacity and relative protoplast volume at low water potential ( w) invitro than tissue from control plants.In-situ water stress induced osmotic adjustment of the leaf tissue as determined by pressure/volume analysis. It is concluded that plant acclimation to low leaf w may involve a reduced degree of cell shrinkage at a given w. This acclimation would allow for the maintenance of relatively higher photosynthetic capacity at low water protentials.Symbols s Osmotic potential - w water potential New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Publication No. 12149-6-87  相似文献   

7.
M. E. Westgate  J. S. Boyer 《Planta》1985,164(4):540-549
The expansion growth of plant organs is inhibited at low water potentials ( w), but the inhibition has not been compared in different organs of the same plant. Therefore, we determined elongation rates of the roots, stems, leaves, and styles (silks) of maize (Zea mays L.) as soil water was depleted. The w was measured in the region of cell expansion of each organ. The complicating effects of transpiration were avoided by making measurements at the end of the dark period when the air had been saturated with water vapor for 10 h and transpiration was less than 1% of the rate in the light. Growth was inhibited as the w in the region of cell expansion decreased in each organ. The w required to stop growth was-0.50,-0.75, and-1.00 MPa, in this order, in the stem, silks, and leaves. However, the roots grew at these w and ceased only when w was lower than-1.4 MPa. The osmotic potential decreased in each region of cell expansion and, in leaves, roots and stems, the decrease was sufficient to maintain turgor fully. In the silks, the decrease was less and turgor fell. In the mature tissue, the w of the stem, leaves and roots was similar to that of the soil when adequate water was supplied. This indicated that an equilibrium existed between these tissues, the vascular system, and the soil. At the same time, the w was lower in the expanding regions than in the mature tissues, indicating that there was a w disequilibrium between the growing tissue and the vascular system. The disequilibrium was interpreted as a w gradient for supplying water to the enlarging cells. When water was withheld, this gradient disappeared in the leaf because w decreased more in the xylem than in the soil, indicating that a high flow resistance had developed in the xylem. In the roots, the gradient did not decrease because vascular w changed about the same amount as the soil w. Therefore, the gradient in w favored water uptake by roots but not leaves at low w. The data show that expansion growth responds to low w differently in different growing regions of the plant. Because growth depends on the maintenance of turgor for extending the cell walls and the presence of w gradients for supplying water to the expanding cells, several factors could have been responsible for these differences. The decrease of turgor in the silks and the loss of the w gradient in the leaves probably contributed to the high sensitivity of these organs. In the leaves, the gradient loss was so complete that it would have prevented growth regardless of other changes. In the roots, the maintenance of turgor and w gradients probably allowed growth to continue. This difference in turgor and gradient maintenance could contribute to the increase in root/shoot ratios generally observed in water-limited conditions.Symbols s osmotic potential - w water potential  相似文献   

8.
Ranjbarfordoei  A.  Samson  R.  Lemeur  R.  Van Damme  P. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(2):165-169
Leaf water potential, leaf osmotic potential, chlorophyll a and b contents, stomatal conductance, net photosynthetic rate, and water use efficiency were determined in two pistachio species (Pistacia khinjuk L. and P. mutica L.) grown under osmotic drought stress induced by a combination of NaCl and polyethylene glycol 6000. A decrease in values for all mentioned variables was observed as the osmotic potential of the nutrient solution (s) decreased. The osmotic adjustment () of the species increased by decreasing s. Thus P. khinjuk had a higher osmotic drought stress tolerance than P. mutica.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The degree of winter desiccation resistance exhibited by Larix lyallii Parl. was assessed by determination of water potential components and content of buds, xylem pressure potential ( xylem) of twigs and amount of damage through winter at timberline in the Rocky Mountains of Canada. Comparative measurements were made on sympatric evergreen tree species to evaluate differences in winter desiccation avoidance and tolerance between evergreen and deciduous trees. Total () and osmotic plus matric potentials ( + ) of L. lyallii buds were lowest in December (-5.0 to-5.3 MPa and-6.6 to-7.0 MPa, respectively) when temperatures were lowest. Bud and water content increased in late winter while xylem of twigs continued to decline until March. The buds were isolated from the xylem from October through February, as indicated by large differences in water potential between the two organs during this time. Buds thus avoided desiccation as water was lost from the twigs. At the same time the buds were tolerant of very low and + , a characteristic which is an important component of freezing damage resistance. Desiccation damage to buds of L. lyallii was much less than that to buds of similar-sized nearby trees of Abies lasiocarpa, although xylem of both species was similar. The deciduous habit apparently confers a significant advantate to L. lyallii, which dominated the upper timberline sites, in reduced susceptibility to winter desiccation damage. Other deciduous timberline species might also benefit from this advantage where winter conditions are desiccating.Seedlings of L. lyallii were also studded for their winter desiccation resistance because they have a large component of non-deciduous (wintergreen) needles that are photosynthetically active through two growing seasons and must overwinter as mature tissue. Experimental exposure of these needles, which are normally protected by the snowpack, caused nearly complete mortality of the wintergreen needles when twig xylem was only-3.9 MPa. The buds on these twigs were undamaged.  相似文献   

10.
N. Terry  L. J. Waldron  A. Ulrich 《Planta》1971,97(4):281-289
Summary Sugar beets were subjected to moisture stress by decreasing the water potential of the culture solution osmotically with polyethylene glycol by a known amount, , and, alternatively by applying matric potential, , at the plant roots. Lowering the water potential at the root surface less than 200 millibars by either method resulted in significant decreases in the rate of cell multiplication. The final number of cells per leaf at = -372 mb the final was 165% of that at = -473 mb ( = –101 mb); similarly at = –15 mb the final cell number was 198% of that at = –196 mb ( = –181 mb). The mean cell volume of leaves was not significantly affected by these levels of moisture stress.  相似文献   

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