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1.
Seasonal and diurnal variation and rehydration effects of pressure-volume parameters in Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco from a plantation in central Pennsylvania, USA, were evaluated during May-September, 1989. Predawn elastic modulus was lowest in overwintering and newly expanded shoots in May and June, respectively, whereas predawn osmotic potentials at full and zero turgor were lowest in May and in early September, following an August drought. Seasonal variation in predawn relative water content at zero turgor was highly correlated with increases and decreases in elastic modulus and osmotic potential. Diurnal osmotic adjustment resulted in nearly constant turgor pressure, despite decreases in bulk shoot water potential. Elastic modulus decreased diurnally on 1 August and increased on 3 September. Decreases in osmotic potential and/or elastic modulus on 24 June and 1 August lowered the relative water content at zero turgor. Plateaus in pressure-volume data caused by excess apoplastic water, were present in 67% of naturally rehydrated shoots and in all of the shoots artificially rehydrated for 3, 6, 12 and 24 h, and they increased in volume with rehydration time. Plateaus represented 80–95% of the excess apoplastic water lost during pressure-volume analysis. Correcting for plateaus via linear regression had no significant effect on osmotic potential at full turgor; however, uncorrected elastic modulus and relative water content at zero turgor were often significantly lower than the plateau-corrected values, particularly in artificially rehydrated shoots. Plateau-corrected osmotic potential at full turgor and osmotic potential at zero turgor were significantly higher in most artificially rehydrated shoots than in those naturally rehydrated as the result of loss of symplastic solutes. Corrected elastic modulus decreased following 12 and 24 h of rehydration and corrected relative water content at zero turgor increased in as little as 3 h of rehydration. These results indicate that seasonal and diurnal patterns of tissue-water parameters in Pseudotsuga menziesii vary with plant phenology and drought conditions, and that the length of rehydration period is an important consideration for pressure-volume studies.  相似文献   

2.
Turgor and osmotic relations of the desert shrub Larrea tridentata   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
Abstract Leaf water relations characteristics of creosote bush, Larrea tridentata, were studied in view of previous reports that its leaves commonly experience zero or negative turgor under dry conditions. Leaf turgor loss point () was determined by a pressure-volume method for samples subjected to a hydration procedure and for untreated samples. Hydration caused to increase by as much as 3 M Pa. Hydration of samples also caused changes in other leaf water relations characteristics such as symplastic solute content, tissue elasticity and symplasmic water fraction, but total leaf solute content was unchanged. Comparison of our field plant water potential data with values of obtained by the two methods resulted in predictions of turgor loss during part or all of a diurnal cycle based on hydrated samples, and turgor maintenance (at least 0.3 MPa) based on untreated samples. Pooled data for obtained from both partially hydrated and untreated samples showed that L. tridentata maintains fairly constant levels of turgor over a wide range of leaf water potential. Dilution of cell contents by apoplastic water introduced significant errors in psychrometric determinations of osmotic potential in both frozen and thawed leaf tissue and expressed cell sap. Use of these values of osmotic potential resulted in predictions of zero turgor at all plant water potentials measured in the field.  相似文献   

3.
Turgor maintenance, solute content and recovery from water stress were examined in the drought-tolerant shrub Artemisia tridentata. Predawn water potentials of shrubs receiving supplemental water remained above ?2 MPa throughout summer, while predawn water potentials of untreated shrubs decreased to ?5 MPa. Osmotic potentials decreased in conjunction with water potentials maintaining turgor pressures above 0 MPa. The decreases in osmotic potentials were not the result of osmotic adjustment (i.e. solute accumulation). Leaf solute contents decreased during drought, but leaf water volumes decreased more than 75% from spring to summer, thereby passively concentrating solutes within the leaves. The maintenance of positive turgor pressures despite decreases in leaf water volumes is consistent with other studies of species with elastic cell walls. Inorganic ion, organic acid, and carbohydrate contents of leaves declined during drought. The only solutes accumulating in leaves of A. tridentata with water stress were proline and a cyclitol, both considered compatible solutes. Total and osmotic potentials recovered rapidly following rewatering of shrubs; solute contents did not change except for a decrease in proline. Maintaining turgor through the passive concentration of solutes may be advantageous compared to synthesis of new solutes for osmotic adjustment in arid environments.  相似文献   

4.
The tepary bean ( Phaseolus acutifolius Gray var. latifolius ), a drought resistant species, was compared under water stress conditions with the more drought susceptible P. vulgaris L. cvs Pinto and White Half Runner (WHR). In order to better understand the basis for the superior drought resistance of tepary, this study was designed to determine the relationships among leaf water potential, osmotic potential, turgor potential, and relative water content (RWC).
Plants were prestressed by withholding irrigation water. These stress pretreatments changed the relation between leaf water potential and relative water content of both species so that prestressed plants had lower water potentials than controls at the same leaf RWC. Tepary had lower water potentials at given RWC levels than Pinto or WHR; this can account for part of the superior resistance of tepary. In all genotypes, prestressed plants maintained osmotic potentials approximately 0.2 MPa lower than controls. Tepary reached osmotic potentials that were significantly lower (0.15 to 0.25 MPa) than Pinto or WHR. Both control and prestressed tepary plants had 0.05 to 0.25 MPa more turgor than Pinto or WHR at RWC values between 65 and 80%. Both prestressed and control tepary plants had greater elasticity (a lower elastic modulus) than Pinto or WHR. This greater turgor of tepary at low RWC values could be caused by several factors including greater tissue elasticity, active accumulation of solutes, or greater solute concentration.
Tepary had significantly lower osmotic potentials than the P. vulgaris cultivars, but there was little difference in osmotic potential between Pinto and WHR. Knowledge of differences in osmotic and turgor potentials among and within species could be useful in breeding for drought resistance in Phaseolus.  相似文献   

5.
Red-osier dogwood ( Cornus stolonifera Michx, Syn. Cornus sericea ), a species relatively well adapted to moderately saline conditions compared with other boreal species, was used to test the effects of NaCl on plant water relations, cell wall elasticity, and cell wall composition of seedlings. Three month-old seedlings were treated hydroponically with 0, 25, and 50 m m NaCl for 21 days. The osmotic potential at full turgor, osmotic potential at turgor loss, pressure potential at full turgor, and relative water content at turgor loss of red-osier dogwood shoot tissue were not significantly affected by the NaCl treatments. Cell wall elasticity of the shoot tissues did not change following NaCl treatments, suggesting that elastic adjustment did not play a role in the adaptation mechanism. Hemicellulose content of the cell wall increased in salt treated seedlings. The primary sugar found in the cell wall hemicellulose fraction was xylose. In the pectin fraction arabinose and galacturonic acid were the main sugars. Sodium chloride stress did not alter the sugar composition of the hemicellulose fraction; however, NaCl did increase the amount of rhamnose in the pectin fraction. The results of this study suggest that at moderate salinity red-osier dogwood does not make any osmotic or elastic adjustments in the shoot tissue, but some changes in the cell wall composition do occur. These changes could contribute to the decrease in growth recorded in red-osier dogwood during NaCl stress.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Seasonal pressure-volume (P-V) analyses were conducted on rehydrated and non-rehydrated leaves of Quercus rubra, Q. ilicifolia, Q. prinus, and Fraxinus americana in central Pennsylvania, U.S.A., to test the hypothesis that rehydration-induced shifts in P-V parameters occur in woody species from a non-arid region, and that the magnitude of these shifts increases with species drought tolerance and drought conditions. The species from a xeric ridge (Q. ilicifolia and Q. prinus) displayed increases of about 0.4–0.6 MPa in the osmotic potentials at full and zero turgor and a concurrent loss of symplastic solutes following 12 h and 24 h rehydration, particularly during a late-season drought. In contrast, the mesic, valley species (Q. rubra and F. americana) did not display significant shifts in osmotic parameters with rehydration at any time. In several instances, the relative water content at zero turgor (RWC0) increased by about 6% (e.g., from 85% to 91%) and the bulk elastic modulus () decreased by about 4.0 MPa following rehydration and correction for the plateau effect; the magnitude of these shifts was greatest in the xeric species. However, when data were not corrected for the plateau effect, RWC0 decreased by about 4% in some of the species/date combinations. Plateaus were also responsible for some of the decrease in with rehydration, but not for the shifts in osmotic potentials. The largest increases in osmotic potentials corresponded with decreases in tissue osmotic solute content. Rehydration-induced shifts in P-V parameters were responsible for masking or reducing most of the species and seasonal differences exhibited in nonrehydrated samples.  相似文献   

7.
Diurnal changes of leaf water potential and stomatal conductance were measured for 12 deciduous shrubs and tree saplings in the understorey of a temperate forest. Sunflecks raised the leaf temperature by 4°C, and vapor pressure deficit to 2 kPa. Although the duration of the sunflecks was only 17% of daytime, the photon flux density (PFD) of sunflecks was 52% of total PFD on a sunny summer day. Leaf osmotic potential at full turgor decreased in summer, except in some species that have low osmotic potential in the spring. Plants that endured low leaf water potential had rigid cell walls and low osmotic potential at full turgor. These plants did not have lower relative water content and turgor potential than plants with higher leaf water potential. There were three different responses to an increase in transpiration rate: (i) plants had low leaf water potential and slightly increased soil-to-leaf hydraulic conductance; (ii) plants decreased leaf water potential and increased the hydraulic conductance; and (iii) plants had high leaf water potential and largely increased the hydraulic conductance.  相似文献   

8.
Electrical impedance measurements made on white spruce, Picea glauca (Moench) Voss, stems were related to shoot free sugar contents and to osmotic, turgor and water potential. During seasonal dormancy induction, there were commensurate increases in free sugar contents, osmotic potential at full turgor and impedance which resulted in linear relationships among these variables. When measured over the course of laboratory drying, impedance increased curvilinearly with decreasing relative water content. There was a linear increase in impedance with decreasing water potential, with a break point coincident with the turgor loss point, possibly attributed to disruption to current flow through broken plasmodesmatal connections between adjacent cells. This technique offers a non-destructive method to measure tissue free sugar content, and therefore, short- and long-term shifts in parameters historically derived from pressure-volume analysis.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. The purpose of this paper is to examine a technique for estimating the weight at full saturation (Ws) from pressure-volume (P-V) analysis of non-rehydrated plant tissue at various water deficits. Tissue samples are typically rehydrated prior to P-V analysis to determine Ws, necessary to calculate many tissue water parameters. However, several studies have indicated that artificial rehydration may significantly alter P-V relationships, such as the plateau effect, resulting in erroneous measurements of tissue elasticity and osmotic potentials. The results of this study suggest that linear regression of P-V data at and above the turgor loss point may be used to extrapolate Ws from non-rehydrated samples at various moisture deficits, thus eliminating the plateau effect and other potential rehydration problems. Determination coefficients and standard errors of the Y-intercept indicated a strong linear relationship between tissue fresh weight and water potential (Ψ), and a high degree of predictability of Ws in all but one of the species-treatment combinations evaluated in this study, despite predawn Ψ as low as - 1.0 MPa.  相似文献   

10.
Leaf age and salinity influence water relations of pepper leaves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Plant growth is reduced under saline conditions even when turgor in mature leaves is maintained by osmotic adjustment. The objective of this study was to determine if young leaves from salt-affected plants were also osmotically adjusted. Pepper plants (Capsicum annuum L. cv. California Wonder) were grown in several levels of solution osmotic potential and various components of the plants' water relations were measured to determine if young, rapidly growing leaves could accumulate solutes rapidly enough to maintain turgor for normal cell enlargement. Psychrometric measurements indicated that osmotic adjustment is similar for both young and mature leaves although osmotic potential is slightly lower for young leaves. Total water potential is also lower for young leaves, particularly at dawn for the saline treatments. The result is reduced turgor under saline conditions at dawn for young but not mature leaves. This reduced turgor at dawn, and presumably low night value, is possibly a cause of reduced growth under saline conditions. No differences in leaf turgor occur at midday. Porometer measurements indicated that young leaves at a given salinity level have a higher stomatal conductance than mature leaves, regardless of the time of day. The result of stomatal closure is a linear reduction of transpiration.  相似文献   

11.
Parker, W. C. and Pallardy, S. G. 1987. The influence of resaturationmethod and tissue type on pressure-volume analysis of Quercusalba L. seedlings.—J. exp. Bot. 38: 535–549. The effect of resaturation method and amount of woody tissueon pressure-volume analysis was investigated using materialcollected from Quercus alba L. seedlings. Leaves excised fromwell-irrigated, intact plants had lower initial xylem pressurepotentials than did leaves resaturated by two artificial methods.Differential capacity for tissue rehydration among the threemethods was linked to shifts in the relative position of pressure-volumecurves, and differences in the osmotic potential and relativewater content at which turgor loss occurred were observed. Pressure-volumecurves from leaves resaturated by all three methods contained‘plateaus’ near full turgor, where xylem pressurepotential declined only slightly with relative water content.These plateaus were apparently associated with apoplastic waterthat accumulated in intercellular spaces of the leaf near fullturgidity, and acted to buffer changes in leaf xylem pressurepotential as tissues dehydrated. The presence of this waterhas implications for derived water relations parameter estimates.Pressure-volume curves for excised shoots also exhibited plateaus,but the relationship between xylem pressure potential and relativewater content over this region was steeper than was found forleaves. Shoot osmotic potentials were somewhat lower than thosefor leaves. The slope of the linear portion of shoot pressure-volumecurves was more shallow than for single leaves, a response associatedwith comparatively lower values of the symplastic water fractionin shoots. Key words: Pressure-volume curve, tissue-water relations, elasticity  相似文献   

12.
Cultivated tomato Lycopersicon esculentum (L.) Mill. cv. P-73 and its wild salt-tolerant relative L. pennellii (Correll) D'Arcy accession PE-47 growing on silica sand in a growth chamber were exposed to 0, 70, 140 and 210 m M NaCl nutrient solutions 35 days after sowing. The saline treatments were imposed for 4 days, after which the plants were rinsed with distilled water. Salinity in L. esculentum reduced leaf area and leaf and shoot dry weights. The reductions were more pronounced when sodium chloride was removed from the root medium. Reduction in leaf area and weight in L. pennellii was only observed after the recovery period. In both genotypes salinity induced a progressive reduction in leaf water potential and leaf conductance. During the recovery period leaf water potential (ψ1) and leaf conductance (g1) reached levels similar to those of control plants in wild and cultivated species, respectively. Leaf osmotic potential at full turgor (ψos) decreased in the salt treated plants of both genotypes, whereas the bulk modulus of elasticity was not affected by salinity. Leaf water potential at turgor loss point (ψtlp) and relative water content at turgor loss point (RWCtlp) appeared to be controlled by leaf osmotic potential at full turgor (ψos) and by bulk modulus of elasticity, respectively. At lowest salinity, the wild species carried out the osmotic adjustment based almost exclusively on Cl and Na+, with a marked energy savings. Under highest salinity, this species accommodate the stress through a higher expenditure of energy due to the contribution of organic solutes to the osmotic adjustment. The domesticated species carried out the osmotic adjustment based always on an important contribution of organic solutes.  相似文献   

13.
Seasonal changes of some water relations parameters of Norway spruce shoots ( Picea abies [L.] Karst.) were studied during two experiments using the pressure-volume analysis. For each experiment only shoots of a single tree were used.
During the first study, the course of the turgor loss point (as bulk osmotic pressure when turgor first reaches zero, πp) of shoots developed in late 1986 vegetation period, were measured in 1987. The turgor loss point decreased temporarily from –2.5 MPa at the beginning of the year to –3.3 MPa at the end of March, but then increased to the original level for the rest of the year.
During the second study, water relations parameters were measured in late summer 1987 and in late winter 1988. Winter shoots at full water saturation contained up to 20% less water than in late summer. Accordingly, the bulk osmotic pressure at full water saturation (πp) decreased from –1.7 MPa in late summer to –1.9 MPa in winter, πp decreased also from –2.2 MPa to –2.8 MPa. However, the amount of osmotically active substances (mOsmol, N) remained unchanged. The relative amount of apoplastic water in the total shoot water content appeared to drop insignificantly from 17% to 15%.
The results show that the decrease in πo and πp in late winter is not due to an accumulation of osmotically active substances in the vacuoles but is due to a decrease in tissue water content. The temporary reduction of the symplastic volume by deposition of osmotically inert substances seems to be the most probable cause of this phenomenon.  相似文献   

14.
Two methods of rehydrating red pine ( Pinus resinosa Ait.) shoots for pressure-volume (PV) analysis were compared to clarify the effects of rehydration on estimated tissue water relations of shoots and fascicles. The commonly employed cut-shoot method was compared to rehydration by means of water uptake through the roots of intact plants. Cut-shoot rehydration and increased duration of rehydration significantly decreased estimates of tissue elasticity and relative water content at zero turgor for both shoots and fascicles. Rehydration of cut shoots for 2 days significantly increased the slope of the linear region of shoot pressure-volume (PV) curves and decreased estimates of the apoplastic water fraction. Changes in these and estimates of other water relations attributes were correlated with increased initial water content during rehydration. Estimated apoplastic water fraction was higher for needle fascicles than shoots despite the large amount of woody stem tissue contained in shoots. Fascicle water status strongly influenced shoot water relations, in part due to apparent apoplastic loading with water of fascicles during rehydration.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that the internal water relations of leaves are altered when cotton plants (Gossypium hirsutum L.‘Acala SJ-2′) are conditioned by several cycles of water stress. Preliminary experiments suggested that plants so conditioned are less sensitive to water deficits and that the change might be partly explained by an accumulation of solutes or by structural alterations attendant on development under conditions of water stress. Leaves of preconditioned plants maintained turgor to lower values of water potential than did leaves of well-watered plants. Accompanying this change was a lower osmotic potential at any given leaf water content in preconditioned plants. Tissue analysis of several osmotically active solutes indicated that soluble sugars and malate accumulate to about the same levels (dry-weight basis) in both conditioned and unconditioned plants exposed to stress. These accumulations could not account for the turgor change. Analysis of the data on relative water content indicated that the leaves of conditioned plants had less water per unit dry weight than did leaves of controls. This change accounts for a substantial fraction of the difference between the osmotic potential of conditioned and control plants. The results of a simple model suggest that structural changes may play a significant role in explaining differences in the responses of conditioned and control plants to water stress.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Water and nitrogen regimes of Larrea tridentata shrubs growing in the field were manipulated during an annual cycle. Patterns of leaf water status, leaf water relations characteristics, and stomatal behavior were followed concurrently. Large variations in leaf water status in both irrigated and nonirrigated individuals were observed. Predawn and midday leaf water potentials of nonirrigated shrubs were lowest except when measurements had been preceded by significant rainfall. Despite the large seasonal variation in leaf water status, reasonably constant, high levels of turgor were maintained. Pressure-volume curve analysis suggested that changes in the bulk leaf osmotic potential at full turgor were small and that nearly all of the turgor adjustment was due to tissue elastic adjustment. The increase in tissue elasticity with increasing water deficit manifested itself as a decrease in the relative water content at zero turgor and as a decrease in the tissue bulk elastic modulus. Because of large hydration-induced displacement in the osmotic potential and relative water content at zero turgor, it was necessary to use shoots in their natural state of hydration for pressure-volume curve determinations. Large diurnal and seasonal differences in maximum stomatal conductance were observed, but could not easily be attributed to variations in leaf water potential or leaf water relations characteristics such as the turgor loss point. The single factor which seemed to account for most of the diurnal and seasonal differences in maximum stomatal conductance between individual shrubs was an index of soil/root/ shoot hydraulic resistance. Daily maximum stomatal conductance was found to decrease with increasing soil/root/ shoot hydraulic resistance. This pattern was most consistent if the hydraulic resistance calculation was based on an estimate of total canopy transpiration rather than the more commonly used transpiration per unit leaf area. The reasons for this are discussed. It is suggested that while stomatal aperture necessarily represents a major physical resistance controlling transpiration, plant hydraulic resistance may represent the functional resistance through its effects on stomatal aperture.  相似文献   

17.
Bean plantlets ( Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Topcrop) were stressed at the age of 16–18 days by gradual (2–8%) or abrupt addition of 6% (w/v) polyethylene glycol Mw 6000 (PEG 6000) to Hoagland solution. Leaf conductance, photosynthesis, internal CO2 partial pressure (Ci), relative water content (RWC), water content/dry weight (H2O/DW), apoplastic PEG concentrations and weight of leaves, stems and roots were determined. Leaf conductance, photosynthesis and Ci were determined on non-detached primary leaves, and leaf potentials (water, osmotic and turgor potentials) were investigated in freshly detached (non-rehydrated) primary leaves, both in treated and control plants; RWC and osmotic potential were also assessed at the null turgor point. Low PEG 6000 concentrations induced early and evident decrease in leaf conductance and photosynthesis, whereas Ci decreased only moderately and tended to recover during advanced stress. There were moderate though significant decreases in RWC and H2O/DW, no change or increases in water potential, no significant changes in osmotic potential and a moderate but significant increase in turgor potential. Even when referred to null turgor point, RWC significantly decreased and osmotic potential was unchanged. It was concluded that apoplastic PEG 6000 accumulation at evaporating sites would account for the early decrease in conductance which would also justify the unchanged or the prevalent increase in water potential and turgor potential. The subsequent PEG diffusion and concentration in the leaf apoplastic water would have induced the RWC and H2O/DW decrease and the final turgor flexion documented.  相似文献   

18.
To determine how tissue water relations vary and contribute to turgor maintenance in species from contrasting ecological zones, seedlings of jack pine ( Pinus banksiana Lamb.), black spruce ( Picea mariana [Mill] B.S.P.) and flooded gum ( Eucalyptus grandis W. Hill ex Maiden) were subjected to an 8 day drought stress by water withholding with and without prior mild water stress conditioning. Jack pine, a deep-rooted species from dry, sandy boreal sites, lost turgor at the lowest relative water content (75–65%) and water potential, and had lowest maximum bulk elastic modulus (Emax of 5.2–5.8 MPa). Although this suggests a high inherent dehydration tolerance, jack pine did not further adjust its elasticity when repeatedly stressed. Black spruce, a shallow-rooted species from predominantly moist sites in the boreal region, lost turgor at intermediate relative water content (86–76%) and water potential, but could adjust its elasticity to maintain turgor in repeatedly stressed tissues. Flooded gum, a deep-rooted species from moist, warm temperate-subtropical regions, had a low inherent drought tolerance since it lost turgor at higher relative water content (88–84%) and water potential, but was capable of some adjustment when the stress was repeated. Elastic adjustment (<3.7 MPa) was more important for turgor maintenance than osmotic adjustment (<0.13 MPa), which was statistically nonsignificant. Maximum bulk modulus of elasticity, but not osmotic potentials at full turgor, was significantly correlated with the relative water content and water potential at zero turgor in droughted seedlings. These results highlight the importance of tissue shrinkage for dehydration tolerance. Both the inherent capacity for turgor maintenance of a species under drought and its ability to adjust to repeated drought should be considered in genetic selections for drought tolerance.  相似文献   

19.
This study aimed to assess the accumulation of organic and inorganic solutes and their relative contribution to osmotic adjustment in roots and leaves of Jatropha curcas subjected to different water deficit intensity. Plants were grown in vermiculite 50% (control), 40%, 30%, 20% and 10% expressed in gravimetric water content. The water potential, osmotic potential and turgor potential of leaves decreased progressively in parallel to CO2 photosynthetic assimilation, transpiration and stomatal conductance, as the water deficit increased. However, the relative water content, succulence and water content in the leaves did not show differences between the control and stressed plants, indicating osmotic adjustment associated with an efficient mechanisms to prevent water loss by transpiration through stomatal closure. The K+ ions had greater quantitative participation in the osmotic adjustment in both leaves and roots followed by Na+ and Cl, while the NO3 ion only showed minor involvement. Of the organic solutes studied, the total soluble sugars showed the highest relative contribution to the osmotic adjustment in both organs and its concentration positively increased with more severe water deficit. The free amino acids and glycinebetaine also effectively contributed to the osmotic potential reduction of both the root and leaves. The role of proline was quantitatively insignificant in terms of osmotic adjustment, in both the control and stressed roots and leaves. Our data reveal that roots and leaves of J. curcas young plants display osmotic adjustment in response to drought stress linked with mechanisms to prevent water loss by transpiration by means of the participation of inorganic and organic solutes and stomatal closure. Of all the solutes studied, soluble sugars uniquely display a prominent drought-induced synthesis and/or accumulation in both roots and leaves.  相似文献   

20.
ACOCK  B.; NICHOLS  R. 《Annals of botany》1979,44(2):221-230
Carnation flower stems were stood in water or sucrose solutionand changes in water content, water and osmotic potential, turgorpressure and solutes (sugars, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium)of petals were measured throughout the flower life. In bothtreatments the petals had a higher specific water content atincipient wilting than when the flowers were first cut. In water,turgor pressure decreased rapidly after the seventh day becauseof a decrease in tissue solute content. In sucrose solution,loss, of solutes was delayed probably because the sugar provideda respiratory substrate to maintain cell membrane integrity.In these cells, sugars and water accumulated causing decreasesin water potential and osmotic potential. Solutes and waterwere lost at about day 15 and turgor pressure decreased. Therewas some evidence that from about day 11 cells were so gorgedwith sugars that they burst when they were placed in water duringthe adjustment of water content prior to water potential measurements. Most of the initial petal osmotic energy content could be accountedfor by sugar, potassium, and anions associated with potassium,but in water, as the petals aged and sugar content decreased,so the potassium ions contributed a larger proportion of theosmotic energy; with stems in sucrose, the endogenous sugarcontent (reducing sugars plus sucrose) contributed an increasingproportion of the total osmotic energy. Dianthus caryophyllus, carnation, flowers, water relations, senescence  相似文献   

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