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1.
Patterns of root cortex cell development and ultrastructurewere analysed in Sagittaria lancifolia L., Thalia geniculataL. and Pontederia cordata L. using scanning and transmissionelectron microscopy (SEM, TEM). In all three species, cortexcells were arranged in radial columns extending from the endodermisto the hypodermis/epidermis. During gas space formation, thecortex cells elongated parallel to the root radius and shrankin the plane perpendicular to the radius leaving long and thinrows of cortex cells extending from the endodermis to the epidermis.Although the cortex cells appeared collapsed in tissue withwell-developed gas spaces, TEM revealed that the cortical cellsas well as the epidermal cells maintained intact membranes andmany normal organelles. Formation of root cortex tissue withwell-developed gas spaces does not require cell death in thesespecies. Living cortex cells in root tissue with mature gasspaces could provide a symplastic pathway for transport betweenthe root stele and the living epidermal cells. Copyright 2000Annals of Botany Company Sagittaria lancifolia, Thalia geniculata, Pontederia cordata, aerenchyma, root, wetland, development  相似文献   

2.
Flooding is a major problem in many areas of the world and soybean is susceptible to the stress. Understanding the morphological mechanisms of flooding tolerance is important for developing flood-tolerant genotypes. We investigated secondary aerenchyma formation and function in soybean (Glycine max) seedlings grown under flooded conditions. Secondary aerenchyma, a white and spongy tissue, was formed in the hypocotyl, tap root, adventitious roots and root nodules after 3 weeks of flooding. Under irrigated conditions aerenchyma development was either absent or rare and phellem was formed in the hypocotyl, tap root, adventitious roots and root nodules. Secondary meristem partially appeared at the outer parts of the interfascicular cambium and girdled the stele, and then cells differentiated to construct secondary aerenchyma in the flooded hypocotyl. These morphological changes proceeded for 4 days after the initiation of the flooding. After 14 days of treatment, porosity exceeded 30% in flooded hypocotyl with well-developed secondary aerenchyma, while it was below 10% in hypocotyl of irrigated plants that had no aerenchyma. When Vaseline was applied to the hypocotyl of plants from a flooded treatment to prevent the entry of atmospheric oxygen into secondary aerenchyma, plant growth, especially that of roots, was sharply inhibited. Thus secondary aerenchyma might be an adaptive response to flooding.  相似文献   

3.
Pearson, J. and Havill, D. C. 1988. The effect of hypoxia andsulphide on culture-grown wetland and non-wetland plants. I.Growth and nutrient uptake.-J. exp. Bot. 39: 363–374. The growth rates of two flood-intolerant (Agropyron pungens,Hordeum vulgare) and two flood-tolerant plants (Oryza sativa,Aster tripolium) were compared after treatments in aerated,unaerated and unaerated plus sulphide, culture solution. Growthof the two flood-intolerant species was reduced 15–20%by lack of aeration and 30–35 % by the sulphide treatment.Growth of the flood-tolerant species was increased by 4–7% when unaerated and decreased 10 % by the sulphide treatment.Of five macro- and three micro-nutrients analysed in shootsand roots, no deficiency or increase in any single element couldaccount for the reduction in growth rate of the flood-intolerantplants. The treatment with sulphide increased the total sulphurm the tissues of the wetland more than in the non-wetland species.A large part of this increase can be accounted for by an increasein sulphate. By comparing the effects of both sulphate and sulphideon the activities of two enzymes of sulphur assimilation (ATPsulphurylase, O-acetylserine sulphydrylase) it was shown thatsulphide uptake by roots does occur and that oxidation to sulphateis its most likely fate. Measurements of root aerenchyma showedno correlation between this and a species' growth rate whenits roots were either unaerated or treated with sulphide. Similarly,there was no correlation between the extent of aerenchyma andthe ability of a plant to oxidize sulphide within the root. Key words: Sulphide uptake, root aerenchyma, sulphide tolerance  相似文献   

4.
Assessments of the anatomy, porosity and profiles of radial O2 loss from adventitious roots of 10 species in the Poaceae (from four subfamilies) and two species in the Cyperaceae identified a combination of features characteristic of species that inhabit wetland environments. These include a strong barrier to radial O2 loss in the basal regions of the adventitious roots and extensive aerenchyma formation when grown not only in stagnant but also in aerated nutrient solution. Adventitious root porosity was greater for plants grown in stagnant compared with aerated solution, for all 10 species in the Poaceae. The ‘wetland root’ archetype was best developed in Oryza sativa and the two species of the Cyperaceae, in which the stele contributed less than 5% of the root cross‐sectional area, the cells of the inner cortex were packed in a cuboidal arrangement, and aerenchyma was up to 35–52%. Variations of this root structure, in which the proportional and absolute area of stele was greater, with hexagonal arrangements of cells in the inner cortex and varying in the extent of aerenchyma formation, were present in the other wetland species from the subfamilies Pooideae, Panicoideae and Arundinoideae. Of particular interest were Vetiveria zizanoides and V. filipes, wetland grass species from the tribe Andropogoneae (the same tribe as sorghum, maize and sugarcane), that had a variant of the root anatomy found in rice. The results are promising with regard to enhancing these traits in waterlogging intolerant crops.  相似文献   

5.
The flooding tolerance of Carex species was studied in relation to their field distribution and their capacity to form root aerenchyma under controlled conditions. In an alpine meadow, six Carex species were selected which were distributed in a clear zonation correlating with water content of the soil. Carex sempervirens and C. ferruginea were only found on nonflooded soil, the latter species preferring moister conditions. Carex davalliana and C. nigra were both associated with water-saturated soil, whereas C. limosa and C. rostrata preferred partially submerged conditions. Carex davalliana and C. limosa were bound to flooded soils with a relatively high redox potential and horizontally flowing groundwater. Carex rostrata and C. nigra grew in stagnant soil-flooded conditions with low soil redox potentials. The amount of aerenchyma in the roots of all species increased when grown in oxygen-deficient stagnant agar. This increase in root porosity, combined with increased root diameter, presumably improved internal aeration of the roots. Although all species survived experimental soil flooding, partial submergence was lethal to C. sempervirens and, surprisingly, also to the wetland species C. davalliana. Carex ferruginea showed a reduced growth rate during partial submergence. The three other species, all wetland plants, reached highest biomass production under soil-flooded and partially submerged conditions, with slower growth on free-draining soil. It is concluded that aerenchyma is not constitutive in the Carex species under study, and is best developed in Carex species from wetlands. Species with less aerenchyma perform poorly when soil-flooded, but conditions of partial submergence could even affect species with a considerable amount of root aerenchyma.  相似文献   

6.
Root growth respiration of Senecio aquaticus Hill (flood-tolerant) and Senecio jacobaea L. (flood-sensitive) was calculated, assuming different P: O ratios. The growth respiration values were calculated on the basis of the chemical composition of root and shoot dry matter, in combination with published data on the energy costs of biosynthetic and transport processes. The comparison between calculated and experimental values suggests a relatively low efficiency of ATP utilization in the roots of the flood-tolerant species. Root growth respiration of S. congestus (R.Br.)DC., which is also flood-tolerant, and Plantago lanceolata L. were also determined. The data showed that not all the flood-tolerant species investigated had high root growth respiration values. An “overflow model’ is proposed to explain observed differences in root growth respiration between species.  相似文献   

7.
Waterlogging tolerance, root porosity and root anatomy wereevaluated for 20 Trifolium accessions (species and sub-species,all annuals) selected from the eight Sections of the genus.Nine accessions were sensitive [relative growth rate (RGR) reducedby up to 80%] to waterlogging, nine accessions were tolerant(RGR not reduced), and in two accessions RGR increased (up to1.9-fold), when compared to drained controls. Growth of themain (i.e. tap) root axis was severely reduced in all accessionswhen waterlogged. Lateral roots formed the bulk of the rootsystem of tolerant accessions when grown in waterlogged soil.Lengths of the longest lateral roots were up to three-timeslonger than the main root axis. Root porosity varied from 0.7–12%among accessions when grown in aerated solution and from 1.1–15.5%in plants grown in hypoxic (0.031–0.045 mol O2m-3) solution.In some accessions aerenchyma formed by cell lysigeny; in othersit formed by schizogenous cell separation, or a combinationof both processes. O2consumption rates of expanded lateral roottissues varied by up to 1.7-fold (on a mass basis) among thesix accessions tested and was reduced by an average of 24% forroots of plants grown in hypoxic solution prior to measurements.Accessions with the highest root porosity tended to have longerroots when grown in waterlogged soil. Three accessions formed‘aerotropic roots’ and the lateral root lengthsof these plants exceeded those of all other accessions, suggestingenhanced O2movement to the submerged lateral root axis via theaerotropic roots. Waterlogging-tolerant accessions were identifiedin seven of the eight Sections in Trifolium, and the tolerantaccessions tended to be those with extensive lateral root systemsof relatively high porosity. Copyright 2001 Annals of BotanyCompany Waterlogging, Trifolium, aerenchyma, hypoxia, flooding, root respiration, clover, root anatomy, root porosity, pasture, aerotropic roots  相似文献   

8.
The effect of flooding on aerobic and anaerobic respirationas well as on the internal levels of ethanol, lactic, succinicand malic acids were compared in three flood-tolerant and twonon-flood-tolerant species. In the non-flood-tolerant speciesKielmeyera coriacea and Pseudobombax marginatum, which comefrom the ‘ cerrado’ vegetation, there was a uniformityof response with ethanol being the only one of the above productsto accumulate substantially during flooding. In the flood-tolerantspecies, Sebastiana klotzchyana, Hymenaea courbaril var. stilbocarpaand Chorisia speciosa, flooding induced a variety of responseswhich indicate that the tolerant species have evolved differingstrategies to overcome flooding stress.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of concurrent salinity (0-60 mM NaCl) and rootzonehypoxia (flooding for up to 15 d) on shoot and root growth andshoot ion concentrations of six species of Trifolium (T. subterraneumL., T. fragiferum L., T. michelianum Savi., T. isthmocarpumBot., T. purpureum Lois., and T. repens L.), was studied intwo greenhouse experiments. There was a significant salinityx flooding effect for shoot yield but no significant salinityx flooding x species interaction although individual speciesdiffered significantly (P < 0·001) in their growthresponse to the saline or flooded conditions separately. Concentrationsof Na and Cl in the shoots of all species increased with increasingperiods of saline flooding and there was a significant salinityx flooding interaction. Sodium and Cl concentrations were significantlyhigher (P < 0·001) in T. purpureum, the species inwhich shoot growth was most depressed by saline flooding, thanother species. In T. michelianum, T. fragiferum and T. repens,fresh and dry weight of roots increased with flooding underboth saline and non-saline conditions while in T. subterraneumroot growth decreased. A significant proportion of the increasedroot growth in the first three species occurred as new adventitiousroots. These roots had higher percentages of internal gas spaceswithin the root tissue even in the presence of salinity comparedwith roots from non-flooded conditions. There were also significantlymore gas spaces in the total root tissue in T. fragiferum andT. repens under saline-flooding than in roots of T. subterraneum.Electron micrographs of the root cross sections illustratedthe presence of these gas spaces or aerenchyma. Trifolium fragiferum, T. repens and T. michelianum are morelikely to be suited to growth in soils prone to high salinityand to flooding than are T. subterraneum, T. purpureum and T.ishmocarpum.Copyright 1993, 1999 Academic Press Trifolium subterraneum, Trifolium fragiferum, Trifolium michelianum, Trifolium isthmocarpum, Trifolium purpureum, Trifolium repens, salinity, flooding, hypoxia, adventitious roots, aerenchyma, subterranean clover, white clover, strawberry clover, purple clover, balansa clover  相似文献   

10.
Structural features of the mature root cortex and its apoplasticpermeability to dyes have been determined for two dicotyledonouswetland plants of differing habitats: Nymphaea odorata, growingrooted in water and mud, and Caltha palustris, growing in temporalwetlands among cattails. In mature roots, movement of the apoplasticdyes, berberine and safranin, into the roots was blocked atthe hypodermis, indicating the presence of an exodermis. A hypodermiswith an exodermis, i.e. Casparian bands in the outermost uniseriatelayer plus suberin lamellae, is present in both species. InN. odorata, hypodermal walls are further modified with cellulosicsecondary walls. Roots of N. odorata and C. palustris have anendodermis with Casparian bands only. A honeycomb aerenchymais produced by differential expansion in N. odorata and includesastrosclereids and diaphragms, while roots of C. palustris haveno aerenchyma, but some irregular lacunae are found in old roots.These aspects of cortex structure are related to an open meristemorganization, with unusual patterns of cell divisions in certainground meristem cells (called semi-regular hexagon cells) ofN. odorata. The correlation between aerenchyma pattern and hypodermalstructure appears to be related to habitat differences.Copyright2000 Annals of Botany Company Caltha palustris, Nymphaea odorata, root development, cortex, endodermis, aerenchyma, exodermis, hypodermis, permeability, wetland plants  相似文献   

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