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1.
Summary Flooding ofPlatanus occidentalis L. seedlings for up to 40 days induced several changes including early stomatal closure, greatly accelerated ethylene production by stems, formation of hypertrophied lenticels and adventitious roots on submerged portions of stems, and marked growth inhibition. Poor adaptation ofPlatanus occidentalis seedlings to soil inundation was shown in stomatal closure during the entire flooding period, inhibition of root elongation and branching, and death of roots. Some adaptation to flooding was indicated by (1) production of hypertrophied lenticels which may assist in exchange of dissolved gases in flood water and in release of toxic compounds, and (2) production of adventitious roots on stems which may increase absorption of water. These adaptations appeared to be associated with greatly stimulated ethylene production in stems of flooded plants. The greater reduction of root growth over shoot growth in flooded seedlings will result in decreased drought tolerance after the flood waters recede. The generally low tolerance to flooding of seedlings of species that are widely rated as highly flood tolerant is emphasized.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Flooding of soil with standing water for 50 or 110 days drastically reduced growth of 178-day-oldPlatanus occidentalis seedlings, with growth inhibited more as the duration of flooding was increased. Flooding reduced the rate of height and diameter growth, leaf initiation and expansion, and dry weight increment and relative growth rates of leaves, stems, and roots. Flooding also induced leaf epinasty, leaf necrosis, and formation of hypertrophied lenticels and many adventitious roots on submerged portions of stems. Severing of adventitious roots after 50 and 95 days from the submerged portions of stems of continuously flooded seedlings reduced several growth parameters including height and stem diameter growth and relative growth rates of leaves and roots. Evidence for the physiological importance of flood induced adventitious roots is discussed.Research supported by College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison and by Yamagata University, Tsuruoka, Japan. The technical assistance of John Shanklin is appreciated.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Flooding induced several physiological and morphological changes in Fraxinus pennsylvanica seedlings, with stomatal closure among the earliest responses. Subsequent changes included: reduction in dry weight increment of roots, stems, and leaves; formation of hypertrophied lenticels and production of adventitious roots on submerged portions of the stem above the soil line; leaf necrosis; and leaf abscission. After 15 days of stomatal closure as a result of flooding, stomata began to reopen progressively until stomatal aperture was similar in flooded and unflooded plants. Adventitious roots began to form at about the time stomatal reopening began. As more adventitious roots formed, elongated, and branched, the stomata opened further. The formation of adventitious roots was an important adaptation for flooding tolerance as shown by the high efficiency of adventitious roots in absorption of water and in high correlation between the production of adventitious roots and stomatal reopening.  相似文献   

5.
Morphological and anatomical factors such as aerenchyma formation in roots and the development of adventitious roots are considered to be amongst the most important developmental characteristics affecting flooding tolerance. In this study we investigated the lengths of adventitious roots and their capacity to form aerenchyma in three- and four-week-old seedlings of two maize (Zea mays ssp. mays, Linn.) inbred accessions, B64 and Na4, and one teosinte, Z. nicaraguensis Iltis & Benz (Poaceae), with and without a flooding treatment. Three weeks after sowing and following a seven day flooding treatment, both maize and teosinte seedlings formed aerenchyma in the cortex of the adventitious roots of the first three nodes. The degree of aerenchyma formation in the three genotypes increased with a second week of flooding treatment. In drained soil, the two maize accessions failed to form aerenchyma. In Z. nicaraguensis, aerenchyma developed in roots located at the first two nodes three weeks after sowing. In the fourth week, aerenchyma developed in roots of the third node, with a subsequent increase in aerenchyma in the second node roots. In a second experiment, we investigated the capacity of aerenchyma to develop in drained soil. An additional three teosinte species and 15 maize inbred lines, among them a set of flooding-tolerant maize lines, were evaluated. Evaluations indicate that accessions of Z. luxurians (Durieu & Asch. Bird) and two maize inbreds, B55 and Mo20W, form aerenchyma when not flooded. These materials may be useful genetic resources for the development of flooding-tolerant maize accessions.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Flooding results in hypoxia of the root system to which N2 fixation of nodulated roots can be especially sensitive. Morphological adaptions, such as aerenchyma formation, can facilitate the diffusion of oxygen to the hypoxic tissues. Using soybean, the aim of the study was to characterize the morphological response of the nodulated root system to flooding and obtain evidence for the recovery of N metabolism. METHODS: Sections from submerged tissues were observed by light microscopy, while sap bleeding from the xylem was analysed for nitrogenous components. KEY RESULTS: Flooding resulted in the rapid formation of adventitious roots and aerenchyma between the stem (immediately above the water line), roots and nodules. In the submerged stem, taproot, lateral roots and adventitious roots, lysigenous aerenchyma arose initially in the cortex and was gradually substituted by secondary aerenchyma arising from cells derived from the pericycle. Nodules developed aerenchyma from cells originating in the phellogen but nodules situated at depths greater than 7-8 cm showed little or no aerenchyma formation. As a result of aerenchyma formation, porosity of the taproot increased substantially between the 4th and 7th days of flooding, coinciding with the recovery of certain nitrogenous products of N metabolism of roots and nodules transported in the xylem. Thus, on the first day of flooding there was a sharp decline in xylem ureides and glutamine (products of N2 fixation), together with a sharp rise in alanine (product of anaerobic metabolism). Between days 7 and 10, recovery of ureides and glutamine to near initial levels was recorded while recovery of alanine was partial. CONCLUSIONS: N metabolism of the nodulated soybean root system can recover at least partially during a prolonged period of flooding, a process associated with aerenchyma formation.  相似文献   

7.
Ten-week-old woody seedlings of Gmelina arborea Roxb., Tectonagrandis L. (De Wild. & Th. Dur.) Merrill, and Nauclea diderrichiif., were subjected to 10 weeks flooding and a 5-week-long post-floodingperiod. Flooding induced the development of hypertrophied lenticels,adventitious roots, and root aerenchyma in Gmelina and Tectona,while it did not in Nauclea. All three species responded toflooding by first closing their stomata and reopening at differenttimes during the flooding period. The time and extent of reopeningwere earliest and greatest in Gmelina, followed by Tectona,and latest and smallest in Nauclea. Differences in stomatalconductance at the end of the flooding period paralleled theconcentrations of ethanol in roots and inorganic nutrients inleaves. After flooding was discontinued, stomatal conductanceincreased in Gmelina, but did not in the other species. Leafwater potentials and transpiration rates of flooded Gmelinaand Tectona plants were higher at week 8 than at week 2 whilethe reverse was the case in Nauclea. It is argued that whilepersistently small stomatal apertures during the post-floodingperiod in Nauclea may be a strategy to slow down the movementof accumulated toxic substances from the soil, the higher leafwater potential and transpiration in Gmelina and Tectona atweek 8 than at week 2 may represent recovery of shoot waterrelations resulting from adventitious roots development. Key words: Flooding, stomatal conductance, transpiration, adventitious roots, ethanol  相似文献   

8.
Summary Symbiotic nitrogen fixation in angiosperms normally occurs in buried root nodules and is severely inhibited in flooded soils. A few plant species, however, respond to flooding by forming nodules on stems, or, in one case, submerged roots with aerenchyma. We report here the novel occurrence of aerial rhizobial nodules attached to adventitious roots of the legume,Pentaclethra macroloba, in a lowland tropical rainforest swamp in Costa Rica. Swamp sapdings (1–10 cm diameter) support an average 12 g nodules dry weight per plant on roots 2–300 cm above water, and nodules remain in aerial positions at least 6 months. Collections from four swamp plants maintained linear activity rates (3–14 moles C2H4/g nodule dry weight/hr) throughout incubations for 6 and 13 hrs; excised nodule activity in most legumes declines after 1–2 hrs. Preliminary study of the anatomy and physiology suggest aerial nodules possess unusual features associated with tolerance to swamp conditions. High host tree abundance and nodulation in the swamp compared to upland sites indicate the aerial root symbiosis may contribute more fixed nitrogen to the local ecosystem than the more typical buried root symbiosis.  相似文献   

9.
Responses to soil flooding and oxygen shortage were studied in field, glasshouse and controlled environment conditions. Established stools ofSalix viminalis L., were compared at five field sites in close proximity but with contrasting water table levels and flooding intensities during the preceding winter. There was no marked effect of site on shoot extension rate, time to half maximum length or final length attained. When rooted cuttings were waterlogged for 4 weeks in a glasshouse, soil redox potentials quickly decreased to below zero. Shoot extension was slowed after a delay of 20 d, while, in the upper 100 mm of soil, formation and outgrowth of unbranched adventitious roots with enhanced aerenchyma development was promoted after 7 d. At depths of 100–200 mm and 200–300 mm, extension by existing root axes was halted by soil flooding, while adventitious roots from above failed to penetrate these deeper zones. After 4 weeks waterlogging, all arrested root tips recommenced elongation when the soil was drained; their extension rates exceeding those of roots that were well-drained throughout. Growth in fresh mass was also stimulated. The additional aerenchyma found in adventitious roots in the upper 100 mm of soil may have been ethylene regulated since gas space development was inhibited by silver nitrate, an ethylene action inhibitor. The effectiveness of aerenchyma was tested by blocking the entry of atmospheric oxygen into plants with lanolin applied to lenticels of woody shoots of plants grown in solution culture. Root extension was halved, while shoot growth remained unaffected. H Lambers Section editor  相似文献   

10.
Summary Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marsh. seedlings that were 150 days old adapted well to flooding of soil with stagnant water for 28 days. Early stomatal closure, followed by reopening as well as hypertrophy of lenticels and formation of adventitious roots on submerged portions of stems appeared to be important adaptations for flood tolerance. Leaf water potential (1) was consistently higher in flooded than in unflooded seedlings, indicating higher leaf turgidity in the former. This was the result of (1) early reduction in transpiration associated with stomatal closure, and (2) subsequently increased absorption of water by the newly-formed adventitious roots as stomata reopened and transpiration increased. Waterlogging of soil was followed by large increases in ethylene content of stems, both below and above the level of submersion. Formation of hypertrophied lenticels and adventitious roots on flooded plants was correlated with increased ethylene production. However, the involvement of various compounds other than ethylene in inducing morphological changes in flooded plants is also emphasized.Research supported by the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA  相似文献   

11.
Responses of Melaleuca quinquenervia seedlings to flooding   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract Studies were conducted on effects of flooding for 15, 30, 60, and 90 days on morphological changes, stomatal aperture, water potential, and growth of seedlings of Melaleuca quinquenervia, a species often planted for reclamation of swamps. Flooding rapidly induced formation of many hair-like adventitious roots as well as a few thick adventitious roots that originated on the original root system. Some adventitious roots also formed on submerged portions of the stem. Melaleuca seedlings were very tolerant of flooding as shown by only slight reduction in dry weight increment of shoots after 30 days of flooding in stagnant water. Although flooding for 60 or 90 days significantly reduced dry weight increment of leaves, dry weight increment of roots was not inhibited by any flooding treatment, reflecting both degeneration of some of the original roots and compensatory growth of adventitious roots. On certain days flooding induced stomatal closure on both adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces. Extensive production of adventitious roots and some stomatal reopening after a critical period of flooding appeared to be important factors in the flooding tolerance of Melaleuca and are consistent with its aggressiveness and vigorous growth on wet sites.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated some aspects of flooding tolerance in two riparian populations (exposed and no exposed to flooding) of Luehea divaricata C. Martius. Plants derived from seeds collected in each population were submitted to flooding (30 and 60 d), submergence and re-aeration treatments. Plants exposed to flooding showed development of aerenchyma, hypertrophic lenticels and new adventitious roots. Interestingly, whereas the plants originated from population naturally exposed to flooding developed some of these alterations more markedly, they could not survive when totally submerged. The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers, showed a significant difference between populations, suggesting that seasonal flooding on riparian populations of L. divaricata has been selecting individuals who are more adapted to survive in these conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Flooding for up to 40 days induced morphological changes and reduced growth of 6-week-old Eucalyptus camaldulensis and Eucalyptus globulus seedlings. However, the specific responses to flooding varied markedly between these species and with duration of flooding. Both species produced abundant adventitious roots that originated near the tap root and original lateral roots, but only E. camaldulensis produced adventitious roots on submerged portions of the stem. Flooding induced leaf epinasty and reduced total dry weight increment of seedling of both species but growth of E. globulus was reduced more. In both species dry weight increment of shoots was reduced more than dry weight increment of roots, reflecting compensatory growth of adventitious roots. Adaptation to flooding appeared to be greater in E. camaldulensis than in E. globulus. the importance of formation of adventitious roots in flooding tolerance is emphasized.Research supported by the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison; CEPEC (Cacao Research Center), Bahia, Brazil; and BMBRAPA (Brazilian Research Institute), Brasilia, Brazil  相似文献   

14.
Responses of red alder and black cottonwood seedlings to flooding   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Red alder ( Alnus rubra Bong.) and black cottonwood ( Populus trichocarpa Torr. & Gray) seedlings were monitored to evaluate response during a 20-day period of artificial flooding and a 20-day recovery period following flooding. During the flooding period, both species showed changes in nutrient uptake and transport, initiated stemderived adventitious roots that became aerenchymatous, and exhibited hypertrophied lenticels. Flooded red alder seedlings also showed reduced height and leaf area growth and developed lower-stem hypertrophy. Flooded black cottonwood seedlings exhibited root dieback, aerenchyma in below ground root tips, and changes in root hydraulic conductance and xylem pressure potential. Contrary to expectations, however, stomatal closure following flooding was not observed in either species. Flooded red alder seedlings increased growth rapidly when drained, and by the end of the recovery period, formerly flooded and non-flooded red alder seedlings differed only minimally in this respect. In contrast, several characteristics of black cottonwood – including growth rate and nutrient content – still differed between formerly flooded and non-flooded seedlings at the end of the recovery period. Based on observed treatment differences at the end of the experiment, red alder seedlings were judged to be more tolerant of flooding than black cottonwood.  相似文献   

15.
Black spruce [ Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.] and tamarack [ Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch] are the predominant tree species in boreal peatlands. The effects of 34 days of flooding on morphological and physiological responses were investigated in the greenhouse for black spruce and tamarack seedlings in their second growing season (18 months old). Flooding resulted in reduced root hydraulic conductance, net assimilation rate and stomatal conductance and increased needle electrolyte leakage in both species. Flooded tamarack seedlings maintained a higher net assimilation rate and stomatal conductance compared to flooded black spruce. Flooded tamarack seedlings were also able to maintain higher root hydraulic conductance compared to flooded black spruce seedlings at a comparable time period of flooding. Root respiration declined in both species under flooding. Sugar concentration increased in shoots while decreasing in roots in both species under flooding. Needles of flooded black spruce appeared necrotic and electrolyte leakage increased over time with flooding and remained significantly higher than in flooded tamarack seedlings. No visible damage symptoms were observed in flooded tamarack seedlings. Flooded tamarack seedlings developed adventitious roots beginning 16 days after the start of flooding treatment. Adventitious roots exhibited significantly higher root hydraulic conductivity than similarly sized flooded tamarack roots. Flooded black spruce lacked any such morphological adaptation. These results suggest that tamarack is better able to adjust both morphologically and physiologically to prolonged soil flooding than black spruce seedlings.  相似文献   

16.
水翁(Cleistocalyx operculatus)幼苗对淹水的反应初报   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
研究了水翁在生理和形态上对3个月淹水期的反应。在潮湿或淹水条件下水翁能存活并保持一定的净光合速率和生长速率,全淹条件下存活期为60d,水翁对淹水的适应包括:(1)淹和的茎部产生肥大皮孔和不定根,(2)不定根系的活力比正常根系的活力高,有不定根的植株的气孔传导率和蒸腾速率比没有不定根的植株高得多。水翁是一种耐淹植物,可在河岸、库岸等水位波动地区种植。  相似文献   

17.
H. Shiba  H. Daimon 《Plant and Soil》2003,255(1):209-215
The effect of up to 48 h of flooding on the development of roots of Sesbania cannabina an0d S. rostrata seedlings was examined in a pot experiment. Light microscopy revealed that the outermost cells of the phellogen of the taproot of S. cannabina expanded and elongated during the first 12 h of flooding. After 18 h, the outermost of these regions was composed of cells that had expanded radially direction to form a spongy zone inside the endodermis. These elongated cells were radially connected to each other and formed the secondary aerenchyma surrounding the stele of taproot. While those histological alterations were not observed in S. rostrata, the number of layers of cells originating in the pericycle increased slightly, but elongation of the cells was not found during the first 18 h of flooding. After 36 h of flooding, cell elongation was also detected as outer layers of the phellogen. The delayed response to flooding in aerenchyma production in S. rostrata was compensated by immediate development of adventitious roots on submerged parts of the hypocotyl.  相似文献   

18.

Background and Aims

Aerenchyma provides a low-resistance O2 transport pathway that enhances plant survival during soil flooding. When in flooded soil, soybean produces aerenchyma and hypertrophic stem lenticels. The aims of this study were to investigate O2 dynamics in stem aerenchyma and evaluate O2 supply via stem lenticels to the roots of soybean during soil flooding.

Methods

Oxygen dynamics in aerenchymatous stems were investigated using Clark-type O2 microelectrodes, and O2 transport to roots was evaluated using stable-isotope 18O2 as a tracer, for plants with shoots in air and roots in flooded sand or soil. Short-term experiments also assessed venting of CO2 via the stem lenticels.

Key Results

The radial distribution of the O2 partial pressure (pO2) was stable at 17 kPa in the stem aerenchyma 15 mm below the water level, but rapidly declined to 8 kPa at 200–300 µm inside the stele. Complete submergence of the hypertrophic lenticels at the stem base, with the remainder of the shoot still in air, resulted in gradual declines in pO2 in stem aerenchyma from 17·5 to 7·6 kPa at 13 mm below the water level, and from 14·7 to 6·1 kPa at 51 mm below the water level. Subsequently, re-exposure of the lenticels to air caused pO2 to increase again to 14–17 kPa at both positions within 10 min. After introducing 18O2 gas via the stem lenticels, significant 18O2 enrichment in water extracted from roots after 3 h was confirmed, suggesting that transported O2 sustained root respiration. In contrast, slight 18O2 enrichment was detected 3 h after treatment of stems that lacked aerenchyma and lenticels. Moreover, aerenchyma accelerated venting of CO2 from submerged tissues to the atmosphere.

Conclusions

Hypertrophic lenticels on the stem of soybean, just above the water surface, are entry points for O2, and these connect to aerenchyma and enable O2 transport into roots in flooded soil. Stems that develop aerenchyma thus serve as a ‘snorkel’ that enables O2 movement from air to the submerged roots.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Spring flooding was investigated as a possible limiting factor in the development of nitrogenase activity, root growth, and shoot growth inMyrica gale. Dormant, one year oldMyrica gale plants were placed in a greenhouse in early April and given three treatments: control (not flooded), flooded-water (flooded with water to 2.5 cm above the soil level) and flooded-peat (flooded with water-saturated peat to 4.0 cm above the soil level). Nitrogenase activity was absent at budbreak but appeared concurrently with the differentiation of vesicles by theFrankia sp. endophyte. Flooding delayed the onset of nitrogenase activity, substantially reduced the specific nitrogenase activity of the nodules, and also severely limited the production of the new nodule biomass. Consequently by 67 days past budbreak nitrogenase activity was much greater in the control plants (5.55±0.42 mol C2H4/plant.h; ± SE; N=9) than in the flooded-water (1.18±0.29) and flooded-peat (0.15±0.05) plants. Production of new secondary roots was substantially reduced in the flooded plants but adventitious roots were rapidly produced along the flooded portion of the stem in the better aerated zone near the surface. New nodules formed on several adventitious roots by 67 days indicating that the plants are able to replace their largely nonfunctional deeply flooded nodules with new nodules in the aerobic zone. Initially shoot growth was unaffected by flooding but by 67 days the flooded plants had substantially less leaf biomass, lower leaf and stem nitrogen concentrations, and less total shoot nitrogen content than the control plants.  相似文献   

20.

Background and Aims

Erythrina speciosa is a Neotropical tree that grows mainly in moist habitats. To characterize the physiological, morphological and growth responses to soil water saturation, young plants of E. speciosa were subjected experimentally to soil flooding.

Methods

Flooding was imposed from 2 to 4 cm above the soil surface in water-filled tanks for 60 d. Non-flooded (control) plants were well watered, but never flooded. The net CO2 exchange (ACO2), stomatal conductance (gs) and intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) were assessed for 60 d. Soluble sugar and free amino acid concentrations and the proportion of free amino acids were determined at 0, 7, 10, 21, 28 and 45 d of treatments. After 28, 45 and 60 d, dry masses of leaves, stems and roots were determined. Stem and root cross-sections were viewed using light microscopy.

Key Results

The ACO2 and gs were severely reduced by flooding treatment, but only for the first 10 d. The soluble sugars and free amino acids increased until the tenth day but decreased subsequently. The content of asparagine in the roots showed a drastic decrease while those of alanine and γ-aminobutyric increased sharply throughout the first 10 d after flooding. From the 20th day on, the flooded plants reached ACO2 and gs values similar to those observed for non-flooded plants. These events were coupled with the development of lenticels, adventitious roots and aerenchyma tissue of honeycomb type. Flooding reduced the growth rate and altered carbon allocation. The biomass allocated to the stem was higher and the root mass ratio was lower for flooded plants when compared with non-flooded plants.

Conclusions

Erythrina speciosa showed 100 % survival until the 60th day of flooding and was able to recover its metabolism. The recovery during soil flooding seems to be associated with morphological alterations, such as development of hypertrophic lenticels, adventitious roots and aerenchyma tissue, and with the maintenance of neutral amino acids in roots under long-term exposure to root-zone O2 deprivation.Key words: Erythrina speciosa, aerenchyma, amino acid content, biomass allocation, photosynthesis, flooding adaptations, stomatal conductance, O2 deficiency, γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)  相似文献   

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