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41.
For Tunisian olive tree orchards, nitrogen deficiency is an important nutritional problem, in addition to the availability of water. Establishment of relationships between nutrients such as nitrogen and ecophysiological parameters is a promising method to manage fertilisation at orchard level. Therefore, a nitrogen stress experiment with one-year-old olive trees (Olea europaea L. ‘Koroneiki’ and ‘Meski’) was conducted with trees respectively subjected to four nitrogen supply regimes (23.96 meq l−1, 9.58 meq l−1, 4.79 meq l−1 and 0 meq l−1 NO3 −1).  相似文献   
42.

Background and Aims

Girdling, or the removal of a strip of bark around a tree''s outer circumference, is often used to study carbon relationships, as it triggers several carbon responses which seem to be interrelated.

Methods

An existing plant model describing water and carbon transport in a tree was used to evaluate the mechanisms behind the girdling responses. Therefore, the (un)loading functions of the original model were adapted and became a function of the phloem turgor pressure.

Key Results

The adapted model successfully simulated the measured changes in stem growth induced by girdling. The model indicated that the key driving variables for the girdling responses were changes in turgor pressure due to local changes in sugar concentrations. Information about the local damage to the phloem system was transferred to the other plant parts (crown and roots) by a change in phloem pressure. After girdling, the loading rate was affected and corresponded to the experimentally observed feedback inhibition. In addition, the unloading rate decreased after girdling and even reversed in some instances. The model enabled continuous simulation of changes in starch content, although a slight underestimation was observed compared with measured values.

Conclusions

For the first time a mechanistic plant model enabled simulation of tree girdling responses, which have thus far only been experimentally observed and fragmentally reported in literature. The close agreement between measured and simulated data confirms the underlying mechanisms introduced in the model.  相似文献   
43.
In trees, stem diameter variations are related to changes in stem water content, because internally stored water is depleted and replenished over a day. To confirm this relationship, non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was combined with point dendrometer measurements in three actively transpiring oak (Quercus robur L.) trees. Two of these oak trees were girdled to study the stem increment above the girdling zone. MRI images and micrographs of stem cross-sections revealed a close link between the water distribution and the anatomical features of the stem. Stem tissues with the highest amount of water were physiologically the most active ones, being the youngest differentiating xylem cells, the cambium and the youngest differentiating and conductive phloem cells. Daily changes in stem diameter corresponded well with the simultaneously MRI-measured amount of water, confirming their strong interdependence. MRI images also revealed that the amount of water in the elastic bark tissues, excluding cambium and the youngest phloem, contributed most to the daily stem diameter changes. After bark removal, an additional increase in stem diameter was measured above the girdle. This increase was attributed not only to the cambial production of new cells, but also to swelling of existing bark cells. In conclusion, the comparison of MRI and dendrometer measurements confirmed previous interpretations and applications of dendrometers and illustrates the additional and complementary information MRI can reveal regarding water relations in plants.  相似文献   
44.
A substantial portion of locally respired CO2 in stems can be assimilated by chloroplast-containing tissues. Woody tissue photosynthesis (Pwt) therefore plays a major role in the stem carbon balance. To study the impact of Pwt on stem carbon cycling along a gradient of water availability, stem CO2 efflux (EA), xylem CO2 concentration ([CO2]), and xylem water potential (Ψxylem) were measured in 4-year-old Populus tremula L. trees exposed to drought stress and different regimes of light exclusion of woody tissues. Under well-watered conditions, local Pwt decreased EA up to 30%. Axial CO2 diffusion (Dax) induced by distant Pwt caused an additional decrease in EA of up to 25% and limited xylem [CO2] build-up. Under drought stress, absolute decreases in EA driven by Pwt remained stable, denoting that Pwt was not affected by drought. At the end of the dry period, when transpiration was low, local Pwt and Dax offset 20% and 10% of stem respiration on a daily basis, respectively. These results highlight (a) the importance of Pwt for an adequate interpretation of EA measurements and (b) homeostatic Pwt along a drought stress gradient, which might play a crucial role to fuel stem metabolism when leaf carbon uptake and phloem transport are limited.  相似文献   
45.
Hydraulic modelling is a primary tool to predict plant performance in future drier scenarios. However, as most tree models are validated under non‐stress conditions, they may fail when water becomes limiting. To simulate tree hydraulic functioning under moist and dry conditions, the current version of a water flow and storage mechanistic model was further developed by implementing equations that describe variation in xylem hydraulic resistance (RX) and stem hydraulic capacitance (CS) with predawn water potential (ΨPD). The model was applied in a Mediterranean forest experiencing intense summer drought, where six Quercus ilex trees were instrumented to monitor stem diameter variations and sap flow, concurrently with measurements of predawn and midday leaf water potential. Best model performance was observed when CS was allowed to decrease with decreasing ΨPD. Hydraulic capacitance decreased from 62 to 25 kg m?3 MPa?1 across the growing season. In parallel, tree transpiration decreased to a greater extent than the capacitive water release and the contribution of stored water to transpiration increased from 2.0 to 5.1%. Our results demonstrate the importance of stored water and seasonality in CS for tree hydraulic functioning, and they suggest that CS should be considered to predict the drought response of trees with models.  相似文献   
46.
N2 fixation (nitrogenase activity), primary production, and diazotrophic community composition of stromatolite mats from Highborne Cay, Exuma, Bahamas, were examined over a 2-year period (1997-1998). The purpose of the study was to characterize the ecophysiology of N2 fixation in modern marine stromatolites. Microbial mats are an integral surface component of these stromatolites and are hypothesized to have a major role in stromatolite formation and growth. The stromatolite mats contained active photosynthetic and diazotrophic assemblages that exhibited temporal separation of nitrogenase activity (NA) and photosynthesis. Maximal NA was detected at night. Seasonal differences in NA and net O2 production were observed. Photosynthetic activity and the availability of reduced organic carbon appear to be the key determinants of NA. Additions of the de novo protein synthesis inhibitor chloramphenicol did not inhibit NA in March 1998, but greatly inhibited NA in August 1998. Partial sequence analysis of the nifH gene indicates that a broad diversity of diazotrophs may be responsible for NA in the stromatolites.  相似文献   
47.
Dynamics in microclimate and physiological plant traits were studied for Pubescent oak and Scots pine in a dry inner-alpine valley in Switzerland, at a 10 min resolution for three consecutive years (2001-2003). As expected, stomata tended to close with increasing drought in air and soil. However, stomatal aperture in oak was smaller than in pine under relatively wet conditions, but larger under dry conditions. To explore underlying mechanisms, a model was applied that (i) quantifies water relations within trees from physical principles (mechanistic part) and (ii) assumes that signals from light, stomatal aperture, crown water potential, and tree water deficit in storage pools control stomata (systemic part). The stomata of pine showed a more sensitive response to increasing drought because both factors, the slowly changing tree water deficit and the rapidly changing crown water potential, closed the stomata. By contrast, the stomata of oak became less drought-sensitive as the closing signal of crown water potential was opposed by the opening signal of tree water deficit. Moreover, parameter optimization suggests that oak withdrew more water from the storage pools and reduced leaf water potentials to lower levels, without risking serious damage by cavitation. The new model thus suggests how the hydraulic water flow and storage system determines the responses in stomatal aperture and transpiration to drought at time scales ranging from hours to multiple years, and why pine and oak might differ in such responses. These differences explain why oaks are more efficient competitors during drought periods, although this was not the case in the extremely dry year 2003, which provoked massive leaf loss and, from July onwards, physiological activity almost ceased.  相似文献   
48.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Daytime CO2 efflux rates (FCO2) from tree stems are often reported to be lower than expected from the exponential relationship between temperature and respiration. Explanations of daytime depression in FCO2 have focused on the possible role of internal CO2 transport in the xylem. However, another possible cause that has been overlooked is the daily dynamics of the water status in the living stem tissues and its influence on stem growth rate and thus respiration. The objective of this study was to assess the daily dynamics of stem water status and growth rate and to determine the extent to which they may be linked to daily variations in stem FCO2. METHODS: FCO2 of young beech and oak stems were measured under controlled conditions. Relative stem turgor pressure (Psi(p)), obtained from simulations with the 'RCGro' model, was used as an indicator of the water status in the living stem tissues. Daily dynamics of stem growth were derived from Psi(p): growth was assumed to occur when Psi(p) exceeded a relative threshold value. KEY RESULTS: There was a strong correspondence between fluctuations in FCO2 and simulated Psi(p). The non-growth conditions during daytime coincided with depressions in FCO2. Moreover, FCO2 responded to changes in Psi(p) in the absence of growth, indicating also that maintenance processes were influenced by the water status in the living stem tissues. CONCLUSIONS: Daytime depressions in stem FCO2 correlate with the daily dynamics of turgor, as a measure of the water status in the living stem tissues: it is suggested that water status of tree stems is a potentially important determinant of stem FCO2, as it influences the rate of growth and maintenance processes in the living tissues of the stem.  相似文献   
49.
The objective of this project was to develop and test a new technology for imaging growing joints by means of diffraction-enhanced imaging (DEI) combined with CT and using a synchrotron radiation source. DEI–CT images of an explanted 4-wk-old piglet stifle joint were acquired by using a 40-keV beam. The series of scanned slices was later ‘stitched’ together, forming a 3D dataset. High-resolution DEI-CT images demonstrated fine detail within all joint structures and tissues. Striking detail of vasculature traversing between bone and cartilage, a characteristic of growing but not mature joints, was demonstrated. This report documents for the first time that DEI combined with CT and a synchrotron radiation source can generate more detailed images of intact, growing joints than can currently available conventional imaging modalities.Abbreviations: DEI, diffraction-enhanced imagingDiffraction-enhanced imaging (DEI) is a biomedical imaging technique that, compared with conventional radiography, generates very detailed images with more edge contrast but deposits a lower radiation dose to the object. DEI generates enhanced contrast both from absorption, the process involved in conventional radiography, and from of X-ray refraction, a process that harnesses photons that otherwise typically are imperceptibly diffracted.4 The DEI technique collects information from X-rays that are refracted as they pass through tissues that have different refractive indices as it almost completely removes diffracted X-rays. In comparison, conventional radiography produces images from X-rays that are attenuated by the tissues through which they pass, but X-rays that are refracted within those same tissues confound, rather than clarify, image contrast. The creation of contrast from the refraction of X-rays, rather than exclusively from absorption, yields images that display more detail with clearer distinction between tissue interfaces. Refraction-based imaging can reveal tiny structures that are transparent to X-ray attenuation but have sufficient variation in density to produce refraction contrast. Furthermore, refraction-based imaging decreases the required radiation dose.21To obviate the superimposing effects in a 2-dimensional DEI refraction image, we considered that combining CT with DEI would yield images with even greater clarity. CT allows a 3D representation of the sample, such that contrast from features at different depths are no longer superimposed on one another but can be separated and viewed as independent structures. Although this advantage is valuable in traditional absorption imaging, the additional features that provide contrast in a refraction-based image enhance the value of CT. Combining DEI technology, which is capable of imaging soft-tissue detail, with CT, which allows segregation of the contrast images at different depths, overcomes limitations of conventional X-ray imaging, namely lack of distinction of soft tissues and 2-dimensionality. As we report here, DEI combined with CT and a synchrotron-generated X-ray source yields 3D images of growing joint tissues at a resolution on the order of micrometers, which is much higher than can be generated using conventional imaging techniques.A synchrotron radiation source was required for the development of DEI because a synchrotron currently is the only source capable of providing an intensely brilliant light (millions of times brighter than sunlight and conventional X-ray sources), is highly collimated (light rays in the beam remain parallel with negligible dispersion over distance), can be made to be monochromatic (having a single wavelength), and can be tuned precisely to an array of energy ranges. The Canadian Light Source (www.lightsource.ca), which began operations in 2005, is one of only 47 synchrotron facilities worldwide and the only such facility in Canada. Although nonsynchrotron sources of X-rays for DEI–CT are conceivable,16,18 such technology requires considerable image-acquisition time. Regardless, the quality of images generated by using synchrotron technology likely would remain the standard with which any new nonsynchrotron DEI–CT technological innovations would be compared.14Despite refinements in medical imaging, conventional radiography, CT scanning, and MRI still are insufficient to discern fine details, particularly in growing joints in which soft tissues (including cartilage) predominate and change with physiologic growth. The impetus for the current research was to develop an imaging technique that better demonstrated normal joint characteristics during growth and, in the future, could be applied to pathologic joints for experimental research and eventually clinical applications. In particular, we were motivated by a need to more effectively and reliably image growing joints affected by arthritis, a disease associated with alterations of bone and cartilage growth, tissue morphology and vascularity. Childhood arthritis research likely will benefit from having an improved imaging technique to aid in early diagnosis, monitor disease progression, and assess responses to therapies. The long-term outcomes of childhood arthritis are improved with early diagnosis and prompt and effective response to treatment interventions. Clinical and laboratory-based indicators of inflammation are not always adequate to detect and monitor subclinical intraarticular inflammation which, as with overt disease, can lead to progressive joint damage. Imaging can augment clinical and laboratory assessment of arthritis activity, but even the most sensitive currently available modalities are unable to detect all joint pathology.In juvenile arthritis, joint-imaging outcomes are difficult to evaluate because variations associated with normal growth cannot always be easily discerned from variations induced by the disease. Conventional radiography tends to detect advanced joint damage that has affected bone, but cartilage can be assessed only indirectly, and soft tissue abnormalities cannot be fully evaluated. Consequently, conventional radiography has insufficient sensitivity and specificity to be considered useful for diagnosing or monitoring children with inflammatory joint disease.6,20 MRI, which evaluates both soft tissues and osteochondral structures, can be used to detect cartilage loss, bone erosions, and synovial hypertrophy in children and adolescents, and contrast-enhanced MRI detects active synovitis.1,10 However, standardized approaches to acquire and interpret MRI data are not established for children in general and, in particular, for children with arthritis;12,15 it is not always clear, for example, if observed thinning of cartilage is physiologic or pathologic. Furthermore, although MRI is more sensitive than conventional radiography, MRI too has limited precision in detecting fine structures and pathologic changes; a clinical MRI has less than 50% sensitivity in detecting cartilage damage that subsequently is seen arthroscopically.8,13CT offers another option for joint visualization, given that it provides high-resolution, 3D images of bone from any angle. Despite its high spatial resolution, however, CT cannot match MRI''s soft-tissue contrast resolution, because CT provides negligible variability of attenuation coefficients of soft tissues so attenuation is nearly the same for cartilage, muscles, and ligaments. Furthermore, CT''s value is offset by the necessity for radiation exposure, a particular concern in the pediatric population. Therefore, for joint research and clinical applications, each of the conventional imaging techniques currently available has limitations. A safe, higher resolution imaging system that generates good contrast for all joint structures is required.Because the DEI technique initially was developed by using a synchrotron light source, we similarly used synchrotron technology in the current experiments. In contrast to conventional X-ray tubes, a synchrotron generates light by using radiofrequency waves and electromagnets to energize and accelerate electrons, thus producing brilliant, highly focused light from the entire wavelength spectrum, including X-rays. For the development and evaluation of DEI–CT imaging of joints, we chose to use healthy commercial piglet stifle joints because porcine stifle joints are anatomically similar to human knees.5 In addition, pigs grow quickly, reaching skeletal maturity at the distal femur and proximal tibia in 20 mo,19 thus allowing for the use of the pig as a model to study growth patterns in normal and disease states in a relatively short time period. The current study aimed to develop and test a new technology for imaging growing joints by using DEI combined with CT and a synchrotron radiation source. This report is the first to document the application of DEI–CT for imaging intact, growing joints.  相似文献   
50.
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