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1.
Conservation of element concentration in xylem sap of red spruce   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
We investigated the chemistry of xylem sap as a marker of red spruce metabolism and soil chemistry at three locations in northern New England. A Scholander pressure chamber was used to extract xylem sap from roots and branches cut from mature trees in early June and September. Root sap contained significantly greater concentrations of K, Ca, Mg, Mn, and Al than branch sap. Sap collected in June contained a signficantly greater concentration of Mn than sap collected in September. Sap concentration was related to forest location for N and Mn. Variations in concentrations of N and K were significantly related to the interaction of tree organ and month of collection. Variations in concentrations of P, Cu, Zn, and Fe were not attributable to tree organ, month of collection, or forest location. Patterns of element concentration in xylem sap compared to previously published data on soil solution chemistry indicated a high degree of homeostatic control of xylem sap chemistry. This control likely represents a significant allocation of resources within the tree energy budget.  相似文献   

2.
A new method is described for measuring dissolved gas concentrations in small volumes of xylem sap using membrane inlet mass spectrometry. The technique can be used to determine concentrations of atmospheric gases, such as argon, as reported here, or for any dissolved gases and their isotopes for a variety of applications, such as rapid detection of trace gases from groundwater only hours after they were taken up by trees and rooting depth estimation. Atmospheric gas content in xylem sap directly affects the conditions and mechanisms that allow for gas removal from xylem embolisms, because gas can dissolve into saturated or supersaturated sap only under gas pressure that is above atmospheric pressure. The method was tested for red trumpet vine, Distictis buccinatoria (Bignoniaceae), by measuring atmospheric gas concentrations in sap collected at times of minimum and maximum daily temperature and during temperature increase and decline. Mean argon concentration in xylem sap did not differ significantly from saturation levels for the temperature and pressure conditions at any time of collection, but more than 40% of all samples were supersaturated, especially during the warm parts of day. There was no significant diurnal pattern, due to high variability between samples.  相似文献   

3.
 The mechanism of freeze stress-induced embolism in Fagus sylvatica L. branches was analyzed under controlled conditions. Excised branches were exposed to successive freeze-thaw cycles in temperature controlled chambers. Thermocouples were placed on the bark to detect sap freezing exotherms. The degree of xylem embolism was estimated after each cycle by the loss of hydraulic conductivity. After one freeze-thaw cycle the degree of embolism was found to decrease with xylem specific hydraulic conductivity, small apical shoots being more susceptible to embolism. Exotherms revealed that distal shoots were freezing first and exuded sap as a result of water expansion. The lower water content in apical shoots upon freezing probably induced higher sap tensions which promoted air bubble expansion and vessel cavitation preferentially near the apices. When the decrease in water content was experimentally prevented, embolism developed to a lesser extent. The higher vulnerability of shoot apices may protect the rest of the branch from winter damage. Received: 29 May 1998 / Accepted: 15 August 1998  相似文献   

4.
Complementary laboratory and field experiments showed that theinternal transport of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the xylemof trees is an important pathway for carbon movement. Carbon dioxidereleased by respiration dissolves in sap and moves upward in thetranspirational stream. The concentration of CO2 in xylemsap can be up to three orders of magnitude greater than that foundin the atmosphere. In the present experiments, diffusion outwardof a portion of xylem‐transported CO2 caused a substantialoverestimation of the apparent rate of stem and branch respiration.Rates of CO2 efflux were linearly related to sap CO2 concentration.Direct manipulations of xylem sap CO2 concentration producedrapid and reversible changes in CO2 efflux from stemsand branches, in some cases quadrupling the rate of efflux. Theseresults demonstrated that apparent rates of stem and branch respirationof trees are in large part a by‐product of the rate of CO2 diffusionfrom xylem sap.  相似文献   

5.
Respiration of stems and branches of trees (R(S)) has typically been estimated by measuring radial CO(2) efflux from woody tissue (E(A)) and rates of efflux are often scaled temporally using a temperature relationship (Q(10)). High concentrations of CO(2) in xylem sap ([CO(2)*]) have been shown to affect E(A), and the transport of CO(2) in the xylem stream has been suggested as a mechanism to explain field observations of temperature-independent fluctuations in E(A). Sap velocity and temperature were manipulated in detached branch segments of sycamore (Platanus occidentalis L.) under controlled conditions to quantify these effects. Within individual branches of similar size, E(A) and [CO(2)*] were greater at low sap velocity, while the amount of respired CO(2) transported in sap (transport flux, F(T)) was greater at high sap velocity. E(A) was linearly correlated with [CO(2)*]. In branches of three diameter classes (1, 2, and 3 cm), volume-based E(A), F(T), and R(S) did not differ, but surface-area based CO(2) fluxes increased with diameter class. Regardless of diameter, E(A) accounted for only 30% of respired CO(2) at high sap velocity, while at low sap velocity, E(A) accounted for 71% of respired CO(2). E(A), F(T), and R(S) measured at 5, 20, and 35 degrees C at the same sap velocity showed a typical exponential response to temperature. However, at the lowest temperature, E(A) accounted for only 18% of the CO(2) released from respiring cells compared with 44% at the highest temperature, perhaps due to the effect of temperature on the solubility of CO(2) in water. These results directly demonstrate the transport of respired CO(2) in the xylem stream and may help to explain inconsistencies in stem and branch respiration measurements made in situ.  相似文献   

6.
The extent of interference from xylem sap in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was determined for a woody perennial [ Populus trichocarpa Torr. & Gray x P deltoides Bart, ex Marsh (Hybrid 1l–ll)] and a herbaceous annual ( Phasesolus vulgaris L. cv. Contender). Crude xylem sap collected from excised roots from both species interfered with the assay for zeatin riboside. Assays for zeatin riboside in xylem sap collected from Popidus overestimated endogenous levels, and added standards could not be accurately measured from a range of sap dilutions. When Phaseolus plants were grown under various nutrient regimens, interference in the assay was dependent on nutrient availability. Of xylem sap components (inorganic minerals, amino acids and sucrose) which may vary with environmental conditions or among species, only sucrose interfered at the concentrations tested. Since the pH of xylem sap varies it was necessary to buffer samples prior to analysis. Partial purification using anion exchange columns and Sep-Paks cffectively eliminated interference. These results demonstrate that estimates of plant growth regulators in xylem sap by the ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay) method can be influenced by species and environmental conditions such as plant nutritional status.  相似文献   

7.
Xylem sap was extracted from cut branches of stone-fruit and pip-fruit trees at different times of the year, and analysed for nitrogen and carbohydrate content. Growth of Stereum purpureum was measured in the different sap samples in vitro. Nitrogen and carbohydrate levels in xylem sap from peach trees were highest in late winter and early spring, and these samples supported most growth of S. purpureum. At full bloom the levels of nitrogen and carbohydrate in xylem sap from stone-fruits (peach, nectarine, plum, cherry) were several times greater than in sap from pip-fruits (apple, pear), and the growth of S. purpureum in sap from stone-fruits was approximately ten times that in sap from pip-fruits. The results suggest that seasonal variations in susceptibility of stone-fruits to silver-leaf disease, and the greater susceptibility of stone-fruits than of pip-fruits, are due to differential ability of their xylem saps to support growth of S. purpureum.  相似文献   

8.
In vivo nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.6.1.) activity was measured in leaves, branches and trunk of field-grown Alnus glutinosa (L.) Gaertn. All of the assayed tissues enzymatically reduced nitrate with a decreasing activity [μmol NO2 (g dry weight)−1 h−1] in the order: leaves > branch bark > inner branch tissues > trunk xylem. The NR activity of the various tissues of excised branches was inhibited by tungstate added to the transpiration stream. Part of the nitrate added to the feeding solution (0.2, 0.5 or 1 m M KNO3) of excised branches disappeared during its transport via the transpiration stream in the perennial tissues. This disappearance was enzymatic since it was decreased by tungstate.
No evidence was obtained for the presence of nitrate in natural xylem sap nor for a significant correlation between nitrate content of soil and leaf NR activity. These results indicate that in the field-grown black alder, the nitrate not reduced in the roots could be reduced in the perennial tissues of aerial parts. Since the leaf NR activity does not reflect the actual in situ nitrate reduction, the existence of a constitutive NR activity in Alnus leaves is suggested.  相似文献   

9.
Preconditions of phloem transport in conifers are relatively unknown. We studied the variation of needle and inner bark axial osmotic gradients and xylem water potential in Scots pine and Norway spruce by measuring needle and inner bark osmolality in saplings and mature trees over several periods within a growing season. The needle and inner bark osmolality was strongly related to xylem water potential in all studied trees. Sugar concentrations were measured in Scots pine, and they had similar dynamics to inner bark osmolality. The sucrose quantity remained fairly constant over time and position, whereas the other sugars exhibited a larger change with time and position. A small osmotic gradient existed from branch to stem base under pre‐dawn conditions, and the osmotic gradient between upper stem and stem base was close to zero. The turgor in branches was significantly driven by xylem water potential, and the turgor loss point in branches was relatively close to daily minimum needle water potentials typically reported for Scots pine. Our results imply that xylem water potential considerably impacts the turgor pressure gradient driving phloem transport and that gravitation has a relatively large role in phloem transport in the stems of mature Scots pine trees.  相似文献   

10.
To elucidate the physiological functions of the substances in xylem sap, we analyzed the biological activities of xylem sap from squash (Cucurbita maxima Duch.) root using tobacco BY-2 (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Bright Yellow 2) cell protoplasts. When BY-2 cell protoplasts were cultivated with the total substance of squash xylem sap, the protoplasts elongated remarkably, and cell division was inhibited. Although trans-zeatin riboside (ZR), the most abundant cytokinin in squash xylem sap, had a concentration-dependent effect similar to that of total squash xylem sap, ZR concentrations several orders of magnitude greater than those found endogenously in squash xylem sap (i.e. 2 x 10(-8) M) were required to affect the growth of BY-2 cell protoplasts. The ability to stimulate cell elongation and inhibit cell division in BY-2 cell protoplasts was observed for the ethyl acetate phase fraction (pH 2) of squash xylem sap and an acetonitrile-eluate fraction from reverse-phase chromatography. The xylem sap also showed inhibitory activity for auxin-induced elongation of excised cucumber hypocotyls. These results suggest that an organic substance other than ZR is produced in the root and transported to above-ground organs through the xylem via the transpiration stream, where it is involved in regulating cell proliferation and elongation in the shoot, possibly as an auxin antagonist.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of placing solid implants containing Fe sulfate in branches of Fe-deficient pear and peach trees on the composition of the xylem sap have been studied. Iron sulfate implants are commercially used in northeastern Spain to control iron chlorosis in fruit trees. Implants increased Fe concentrations and decreased organic acid concentrations in the xylem sap, whereas xylem sap pH was only moderately changed. The citrate to Fe ratios decreased markedly after implants, therefore improving the possibility that Fe could be reduced by the leaf plasma membrane enzyme reductase, known to be inhibited by high citrate/Fe ratios. In peach, the effects of the implants could be observed many months post treatment. In pear, some effects were still observed one year after the implants had taken place. Results obtained indicate that solid Fe sulfate implants were capable of significantly changing the chemical composition of the xylem sap in fruit trees.  相似文献   

12.
Xylem Sap from Actinidia chinensis: Gradients in Sap Composition   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In early spring, just prior to leaf break, there were substantialgradients in the concentration of many solutes in xylem sapcollected by vacuum extraction from shoots of different ages,from the branches, trunk and roots of mature Chinese gooseberryvines (Actinidia chinensis Planchon) For most nutrients therewas a progressive fall in concentration from youngest shootsdown to the roots and nitrate was the only nutrient to showa trend in the opposite direction These gradients in concentrationare probably sufficient to account for most of the changes observedin the composition of bleeding xylem sap during the first fewhours of bleeding after a branch is cut or wounded Actinidia chinensis, Chinese gooseberry, kiwifruit, xylem sap, nutrient gradients  相似文献   

13.
The mechanisms regulating stomatal response following exposure to low (5°C) soil temperature were investigated in aspen ( Populus tremuloides Michx.) seedlings. Low soil temperature reduced stomatal conductance within 4 h, but did not alter shoot xylem pressure potential within 24 h. The xylem sap composition was altered and its pH increased from 6.5 to 7.1 within the initial 4 h of the low temperature treatment. However, the increase in abscisic acid (ABA) concentration in xylem sap was observed later, after 8 h of treatment. These changes were accompanied by a reduction in the electrical conductivity and an increase in the osmotic potential of the xylem sap. The timing of physiological responses to low soil temperature suggests that the rapid pH change of the xylem sap and accompanying changes in ion concentration were the initial factors which triggered stomatal closure in low temperature-treated seedlings, and that the role of the more slowly accumulating ABA was likely to reinforce the stomatal closure. When leaf discs were exposed to xylem sap extracted from low soil temperature-treated plants, stomatal aperture was negatively correlated with ABA and positively correlated with K+ concentrations of the xylem sap. The stomatal opening in the leaf discs linearly increased in response to exogenous KCl concentrations when K+ concentrations were in the similar range to those detected in the xylem sap. The lowest concentration of exogenous ABA to induce stomatal closure was several-fold higher compared with the concentration present in the xylem sap.  相似文献   

14.
Infestation of Acacia acuminata by the xylem-tapping mistletoe Amyema preissii invariably results in inhibition of growth, defoliation and eventual death of host branch parts distal to the mistletoe. Branch sectional areas proximal (P) and distal (D) to mistletoes are used to classify stages of parasitism, with P:D area ratios of 5–6 invariably associated with distal branch senescence. As monopolization of the branch proceeds, mistletoe leaf area increases in parallel with declining host foliage area, and the specific hydraulic conductivity of distal host wood declines sharply relative to that of proximal wood, mineral composition and concentrations of nitrogenous solutes in xylem sap are at no stage appreciably different from those of proximal wood. After the demise of the distal branch parts, the transectional area of the host branch stump increases linearly with increasing mistletoe leaf area, the branch area supporting a unit of mistletoe leaf area always being about 3 times greater than that supporting a unit of host foliage area on unparasitized branches. This differential, compounded with high transpiration rates and selective uptake of host xylem solutes by the haustorium, fosters substantial mineral enrichment of the mistletoe relative to its host. The study provides a background for future investigation of possible cellular mechanisms continuously driving structural and functional changes in favour of the mistletoe.  相似文献   

15.
Direct determinations and indirect calculations of phloem turgor pressure were compared in white ash (Fraxinus americana L.). Direct measurements of trunk phloem turgor were made using a modified Hammel-type phloem needle connected to a pressure transducer. Turgor at the site of the direct measurements was calculated from the osmotic potential of the phloem sap and from the water potential of the xylem. It was assumed that the water potentials of the phloem and xylem were close to equilibrium at any one trunk location, at least under certain conditions. The water potential of the xylem was determined from the osmotic potential of xylem sap and from the xylem tension of previously bagged leaves, measured with a pressure chamber. The xylem tension of bagged leaves on a branch adjacent to the site of the direct measurements was considered equivalent to the xylem tension of the trunk at that point. While both the direct and indirect measurements of phloem turgor showed clear diurnal changes, the directly measured pressures were consistently lower than the calculated values. It is not clear at present whether the discrepancy between the two values lies primarily in the calculated or in the measured pressures, and thus, the results from both methods as described here must be regarded as estimates of true phloem turgor.  相似文献   

16.
? It is widely assumed that post-fire tree mortality results from necrosis of phloem and vascular cambium in stems, despite strong evidence that reduced xylem conductivity also plays an important role. ? In this study, experiments with Populus balsamifera were used to demonstrate two mechanisms by which heat reduces the hydraulic conductivity of xylem: air seed cavitation and conduit wall deformation. Heat effects on air seed cavitation were quantified using air injection experiments that isolate potential temperature-dependent changes in sap surface tension and pit membrane pore diameters. Heat effects on conduit wall structure were demonstrated using air conductivity measurements and light microscopy. ? Heating increased vulnerability to cavitation because sap surface tension varies inversely with temperature. Heating did not affect cavitation via changes in pit membrane pore diameters, but did cause significant reductions in xylem air conductivity that were associated with deformation of conduit walls (probably resulting from thermal softening of viscoelastic cell wall polymers). ? Additional work is required to understand the relative roles of cavitation and deformation in the reduction of xylem conductivity, and how reduced xylem conductivity in roots, stems, and branches correlates and interacts with foliage and root necroses to cause tree mortality. Future research should also examine how heat necrosis of ray parenchyma cells affects refilling of embolisms that occur during and after the fire event.  相似文献   

17.
Under two monoxenic culture techniques of growing plants (filter paper and silica sand cultures), sugar in root exudate from Meloidogyne incognita-infected tomato increased 133 to 836% over controls. In contrast, amino acids were moderately reduced 52 to 56%. Chromatographic analysis showed that galled root exudate contained three sugars, twelve amino acids, and three organic acids, whereas healthy root exudate contained four sugars, fifteen amino acids, and four organic acids. Polysaccharide was responsible for the large increase of sugars in galled root exudates. The concn and the absolute amount of total sugars in the infected plant xylem sap were greater than in healthy plant xylem sap up to 6 wk after inoculation, whereas amino acids were moderately lower than in controls throughout the test period. Chromatographic analysis showed that xylem sap from both healthy and infected plants at 4 wk after inoculation contained four sugars and five organic acids. We identified 18 and 17 amino acids in the healthy and infected plant xylem sap, respectively. The concn of sugar increased as the nematode inoculum increased at 2, 4 and 6 wk after inoculation. The amino acids in all samples from the infected plant moderately decreased with an increase of nematode inoculum. We suggest that changes in total sugars and amino acids, of infected plant xylem sap and root exudate are a probable mechanism by which tomato plants are predisposed to Fusarium wilt.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated if concentrations of abscisic acid (ABA) andother solutes measured in the first few droplets of xylem sapfrom detopped root systems, are good estimates of those in thetranspiration stream as it enters the shoot-base of whole plants.Xylem sap from root systems of pot-grown tomato plants (Lycopersiconesculentum Mill., cv. Ailsa Craig), at the seven-leaf stage,was obtained by placing root systems in chambers pressurizedto 0.3 MPa with air. The first sample was taken from the cut-surfaceof the hypo-cotyl stump within 30 s of removing the shoot. ABA,sucrose and other osmolytes were more concentrated in the initial100–200 mm3 of xylem sap than in subsequent samples. Thissuggested the sap was contaminated and not unchanged transpirationfluid. The effect was reproduced on the same plant, severaltimes, by recutting the hypocotyl prior to reassembling thesap collecting set-up and repressurizing. Similar results werefound with castor-oil plants (Ricinus communis L., cv. Gibsonii).However, neither release of ABA from the cut surface of thehypocotyl stump, nor the effects of pressure to the roots causedthe contamination. Instead, small radial pressures exerted bya rubber sleeve attached to the hypocotyl stump, for collectingthe sap, were responsible. The effect was reproduced by lightlysqueezing the hypocotyl by hand. The possibility was examined that reliable estimates of ABAconcentrations in transpiration stream fluid may be obtainedfrom sap samples taken immediately after rejecting the initial,contaminated 200 mm3. However, ABA concentrations in these latersamples were also unsatisfactory since they changed with rateof sap flow. The problem may be overcome by analysing sap inducedto flow through detached root systems at rates close to thoseof whole-plant transpiration. Key words: Tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum Mill., Castor-oil plant, Ricinus communis L., roots, root to shoot communication, xylem sap, abscisic acid, sucrose, transpiration stream  相似文献   

19.
Plant hydraulic architecture (PHA) has been linked to water transport sufficiency, photosynthetic rates, growth form and attendant carbon allocation. Despite its influence on traits central to conferring an overall competitive advantage in a given environment, few studies have examined whether key aspects of PHA are indicative of successional stage, especially within mature individuals. While it is well established that wood density (WD) tends to be lower in early versus late successional tree species, and that WD can influence other aspects of PHA, the interaction of WD, successional stage and the consequent implications for PHA have not been sufficiently explored. Here, we studied differences in PHA at the scales of wood anatomy to whole-tree hydraulic conductance in species in early versus late successional Panamanian tropical forests. Although the trunk WD was indistinguishable between the successional groups, the branch WD was lower in the early successional species. Across all species, WD correlated negatively with vessel diameter and positively with vessel packing density. The ratio of branch:trunk vessel diameter, branch sap flux and whole-tree leaf-specific conductance scaled negatively with branch WD across species. Pioneer species showed greater sap flux in branches than in trunks and a greater leaf-specific hydraulic conductance, suggesting that pioneer species can move greater quantities of water at a given tension gradient. In combination with the greater water storage capacitance associated with lower WD, these results suggest these pioneer species can save on the carbon expenditure needed to build safer xylem and instead allow more carbon to be allocated to rapid growth.  相似文献   

20.
The gall-forming aphid Slavum wertheimae H.R.L., which formscoral-like galls on branches of Pistacia atlantica Desf. trees,induces both qualitative and quantiative changes in xylem differentiationin the branch below the gall. More xylem is formed than in ungalledbranches, and the aphid-induced xylem is characterized by numerouswide vessels in the latewood. In control branches that werenot carrying galls, only a few narrow vessels differentiatedin the latewood. The differentiation of numerous wide vesselsat the end of the growing season, when the population of aphidsin the gall reaches its maximum size, makes possible a substantialincrease of sap movement into the gall tissues Gall-forming aphids, Slavum wertheimae, Pistacia atlantica, vessel size, xylem differentiation (latewood)  相似文献   

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