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1.
Thermal and Water Relations of Roots of Desert Succulents   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Two succulent perennials from the Sonoran Desert, Agave desertiEngelm. and Ferocactus acanthodes (Lem.) Britton and Rose, loselittle water through their roots during drought, yet respondrapidly to light rainfall. Their roots tend to be shallow, althoughabsent from the upper 20 mm or so of the soil. During 12–15d after a rainfall, new root production increased total rootlength by 47 per cent to 740 m for A. deserti and by 27 percent to 230 m for F. acanthodes; root dry weight then averagedonly 15 per cent of shoot dry weight. The annual carbon allocatedto dry weight of new roots required 11 per cent of shoot carbondioxide uptake for A. deserti and 19 per cent for F. acanthodes.Elongation of new roots was greatest near a soil temperatureof 30°C, and lethal temperature extremes (causing a 50 percent decrease in root parenchyma cells taking up stain) were56°C and -7°C. Soil temperatures annually exceeded themeasured tolerance to high temperature at depths less than 20mm, probably explaining the lack of roots in this zone. Attached roots immersed in solutions with osmotic potentialsabove -2·6 MPa could produce new lateral roots, with50 per cent of maximum elongation occurring near -1·4MPa for both species. Non-droughted roots lost water when immersedin solutions with osmotic potentials below -0·8 MPa,and root hydraulic conductance decreased markedly below about-1·2 MPa. Pressure-volume curves indicated that, fora given change in water potential, non-droughted roots lostthree to five times more water than droughted roots, non-droughtedleaves, or non-droughted stems. Hence, such roots, which couldbe produced in response to a rainfall, will lose the most tissuewater with the onset of drought, the resulting shrinkage beingaccompanied by reduced root hydraulic conductance, less contactwith drying soil, and less water loss from the plant to thesoil. Agave deserti, Ferocactus acanthodes, roots, soil, temperature, water stress, drought, Crassulacean acid metabolism, succulents  相似文献   

2.
A technique used for hydroponics was adapted to measure instantaneousroot water uptake from the soil for a leaf succulent CAM species,Agave deserti. Comparisons were made to previously modelledwater fluxes for A. deserti and to Encelia farinosa, a non-succulentC3species. Net CO2uptake and transpiration forA. deserti underwell-watered conditions occurred primarily at night whereasroot water uptake was relatively constant over 24 h. Leaf thicknessdecreased when transpiration commenced and then increased whenrecharge from the stem and soil occurred, consistent with previousmodels. A drought of 90 d eliminated net CO2uptake and transpirationand reduced the water content of leaves by 62%. Rewetting theentire root system for 7 d led to a full recovery of leaf waterstorage but only 56% of maximal net CO2uptake. Root water uptakewas maximal immediately after rewetting, which replenished rootwater content, and decreased to a steady rate by 14 d. Whenonly the distal 50% of the root system was rewetted, the timefor net CO2uptake and leaf water storage to recover increased,but by 30 d gas exchange and leaf water storage were similarto 100% rewetting. Rewetting 10 or 20% of the root system resultedin much less water uptake; these plants did not recover leafwater storage or gas exchange by 30 d after rewetting. A redundancyin the root system of A. deserti apparently exists for dailywater uptake requirements under wet conditions but the entireroot system is required for rapid recovery from drought.Copyright1999 Annals of Botany Company Agave deserti Engelm., desert, drought, gas exchange, rewetting, roots, succulent, water uptake.  相似文献   

3.
The importance of aquaporins for root hydraulic conductance (LP) was investigated along roots of the desert succulent Agave deserti in wet, dry and rewetted soil. Water channel activity was inferred from HgCl2‐induced reductions of LP that were reversible by 2‐mercaptoethanol. Under wet conditions, HgCl2 reduced LP for the distal root region by 50% and for the root region near the shoot base by 36% but did not affect LP for the mid‐root region. For all root regions, LP decreased by 30–60% during 10 d in drying soil and was not further reduced by HgCl2. After soil rewetting, LP increased to pre‐drying values and was again reduced by HgCl2 for the distal and the basal root regions but not the mid‐root region. For the distal region, water channels in the epidermis/exodermis made a disproportionately large contribution to radial hydraulic conductance of the intact segment; for the basal region, water channel activity was highest in the cortex and endodermis. The role of water channels was greatest in tissues in which cells were metabolically active both in the distal root region, where new apical growth occurs in wet soil, and in the basal region, which is the most likely root region to intercept light rainfall.  相似文献   

4.
Water uptake by Agave deserti and Ferocatus acanthodes was predictedusing a two-dimensional simulation model in which the soil arounda plant was divided into a series of layers and concentric cylindricalshells. Root lengths in 0.05 m thick soil layers were determinedfor both species in the field, where mean root depths were only0.11 m for A. deserti and 0.10 m for F. acanthodes. For a yearwith average precipitation (159 mm), 42 per cent of the annualprecipitation could be taken up by A. deserti and 25 per centby F. acanthodes. Predicted water uptake by both species wasgreater from the upper soil layers (above 0.15 m) for averageand dry years, but was greater from the deeper layers for awet year. The actual root distribution for both species ledto more water uptake than when all of the roots were in a singlelayer. The large number of days per year when the soil temperaturesexceeded 57 °C (the temperature for 50 per cent inhibitionof uptake of a vital stain by root cells) may exclude rootsfrom the 0.00–0.05 m soil layer, even though water uptakewhen all roots were located there was predicted to be maximal.Therefore, the observed root distribution of A. deserti andF. acanthodes may be limited near the soil surface by high temperaturesand at maximum depths by water availability for all but wetyears. Agave deserti, Ferocactus acanthodes, desert succulents, root system, root distribution, soil temperature, water uptake  相似文献   

5.
Rectifier-like Activities of Roots of Two Desert Succulents   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Axial and radial water flows for roots in response to appliedhydrostatic pressure drops, water loss from roots after variousperiods of drying, and development of new roots after rewettingdroughted plants were examined for two sympatric desert succulents.Agave deserti Engelm. and Ferocactus acanthodes (Lemaire) Brittonand Rose. For a 40 kPa hydrostatic pressure drop applied to20 mm long root pieces, radial water flows from the epidermisto the root xylem were 2- to 5-fold greater at the tip thanat midlength and were much less than axial flows along the xylem.Upon drying detached roots in air at 20 °C and a water vapoursaturation deficit of 1.2 kPa (50% relative humidity), radialwater flow decreased more than 10-fold in 3–6 h, and couldrecover to the original level 6 h after rewetting. The rateof water loss from attached roots of plants dried in air at20 °C and a 1.2 kPa saturation deficit decreased about 200-foldin 72 h, which would greatly limit water loss from the plantto a drying soil. At 96 h after rewetting roots of A. desertithat had been exposed to air at 20 °C and a 1.2 kPa saturationdeficit for 120 h, rehydration of existing roots and developmentof new roots contributed about equally to water uptake by thewhole plant. In summary, roots of these desert succulents canreadily take up water from a wet soil but do not lose much waterto a dry soil, thus effectively acting like rectifiers withrespect to plant-soil water movement. Key words: Agave, Cactus, Drought, Root, Water flow, Xylem  相似文献   

6.
Summary Root distribution and growth measured in the field were incorporated into a water uptake model for the CAM succulent Agave deserti and its nurse plant Hilaria rigida, a common desert bunchgrass. Agave deserti responds to the infrequent rainfalls of the Sonoran Desert by extending its existing established roots and by producing new roots. Most of such root growth was completed within one month after soil rewetting, total root length of A. deserti increasing by 84% for a seedling and by 58% for a mediumsized plant in the summer. Root growth in the winter with its lower soil temperatures was approximately half as much as in the summer. For a 15-year period, predicted annual root growth of A. deserti varied more than 18-fold because of annual variations in rainfall amount and pattern as well as seasonal variation in soil temperature. Predicted annual water uptake varied 47-fold over the same period. The nurse plant, which is crucial for establishment of A. deserti seedlings, reduced seedling water uptake by 38% during an average rainfall year. Lowering the location of the root system of a medium-sized A. deserti by 0.24 m reduced its simulated annual water uptake by about 25%, reflecting the importance of shallow roots for this desert succulent. Lowering the root system of a medium-sized H. rigida by 0.28 m increased the simulated annual water uptake of an associated A. deserti seedling by 17%, further indicating the influence of root overlap on competition for water.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of junctions between main roots and lateral roots on water flow was investigated for the desert succulents Agave deserti and Ferocactus acanthodes during 21 d of drying in soil. Under wet conditions, the junctions did not restrict xylem water flow from lateral roots to main roots, consistent with predictions of axial conductance based on vessel diameters. Embolism caused by drying reduced such axial conductance more at the junctions than in adjoining root regions. Connective tracheary elements at the junctions were abundantly pitted and had large areas of unlignified primary wall, apparently making them more susceptible to embolism than vessels or tracheids elsewhere in the roots. Unlike the decrease in axial conductance, the overall hydraulic conductivity of the junction increased during drying because of an increase in the conductivity of the radial pathway. Despite such increases, main roots may not lose substantial amounts of water to a dry soil during drought, initially because embolism at the junctions can limit xylem flow and later because soil hydraulic conductivity decreases. Moreover, the increased root hydraulic conductivity and a potentially rapid recovery from embolism by connective tracheary elements may favor water uptake near the junctions upon soil rewetting.  相似文献   

8.
Various plant and environmental factors influence the hydraulicproperties for roots, which were examined using negative hydrostaticpressures applied to the proximal ends of individual excisedroots of a common succulent perennial from the Sonoran Desert,Agave deserti Engelm. The root hydraulic conductivity, Lp, increasedsubstantially with temperature, the approximately 4-fold increasefrom 0.5°C to 40°C representing a Q10 of 1.45. Suchvariations in Lp with temperature must be taken into accountwhen modelling water uptake, as soil temperatures in the rootzone of such a shallow-rooted species vary substantially bothdaily and seasonally. At 20°C, Lp was 2.3 x 10–7 ms{macron}1MPa{macron}1for 3-week-old roots, decreasing to abouthalf this value at 10 weeks and then becoming approximatelyhalved again at 6 months. For a given root age, Lp for rainroots that are induced by watering as lateral branches on theestablished roots (which arise from the stem base) was aboutthe same as Lp for established roots. Hence, the conventionalbelief that rain roots have a higher Lp than do establishedroots is more a reflection of root age, as the rain roots tendto be shed following drought and thus on average are much youngerthan are established roots. Unlike previous measurements onroot respiration, lowering the gas-phase oxygen concentrationfrom 21% to 0% or raising the carbon dioxide concentration from0.1% to 2% had no detectable effect on Lp for rain roots andestablished roots. Lp for rain roots and established roots wasdecreased by an average of 11% and 35% by lowering the soilwater potential from wet conditions (soil=0 kPa) to {macron}40kPa and {macron}80 kPa, respectively. Such decreases in Lp mayreflect reduced water contact between soil particles and theroot surface and should be taken into account when predictingwater uptake by A. deserti. Key words: Gas phase, rain roots, root age, soil, temperature, water potential  相似文献   

9.
A morphologically explicit numerical model for analysing wateruptake by individual roots was developed based on a conductornetwork, with specific conductors representing axial or radialconductivities for discrete root segments. Hydraulic conductivity(Lp; m s–1 MPa–1) was measured for roots of Agavedeserti Engelm. and Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Miller by applyinga partial vacuum to the proximal ends of excised roots in solution.Lp was also measured for 40- to 80-mm segments along a root,followed by measurements of axial conductivity and calculationof radial conductivity. Predicted values of Lp for entire rootsbased on two to ten segments per root averaged 1.04±0.07(mean±s.e. mean for n = 3) of the measured Lp for A.deserti and 1.06±0.10 for O. ficus-indica. The modelalso closely predicted the drop in water potential along theroot xylem (xylem); when a tension of 50 kPa was applied tothe proximal ends of 0.2 m-long roots of A. deserti and O. ficus-indica,the measured xylem to midroot averaged 30 kPa compared witha predicted decrease of 36 kPa. Such steep gradients in xylemsuggest that the driving force for water movement from the soilto young distal roots may be relatively small. The model, whichagreed with an analytical solution for a simple hypotheticalsituation, can quantify situations without analytical solutions,such as when root and soil properties vary arbitrarily alonga root. Agave deserti, electrical circuit analog, hydraulic conductivity, Opuntia ficus-indica, water potential  相似文献   

10.
Cultivated Agave mapisaga and A. salmiana can have an extremelyhigh above-ground dry-weight productivity of 40 Mg ha–1yr–1. To help understand the below-ground capabilitiesthat support the high above-ground productivity of these Crassulaceanacid metabolism plants, roots were studied in the laboratoryand in plantations near Mexico City. For approximately 15-year-oldplants, the lateral spread of roots from the plant base averaged1.3 m and the maximal root depth was 0.8 m, both considerablygreater than for desert succulents of the same age. Root andshoot growth occurred all year, although the increase in shootgrowth at the beginning of the wet season preceded the increasein growth of main roots. New lateral roots branching from themain roots were more common at the beginning of the wet season,which favoured water uptake with a minimal biomass investment,whereas growth of new main roots occurred later in the growingseason. The root: shoot dry weight ratio was extremely low,less than 0.07 for 6-year-old plants of both species, and decreasedwith plant age. The elongation rates of main roots and lateralroots were 10 to 17 mm d–1, higher than for various desertsucculents but similar to elongation rates for roots of highlyproductive C3 and C4 agronomic species. The respiration rateof attached main roots was 32 µmol CO2 evolved kg–1dry weight s–1 at 4 weeks of age, that of lateral rootswas about 70% higher, and both rates decreased with root age.Such respiration rates are 4- to 5-fold higher than for Agavedeserti, but similar to rates for C3 and C4 agronomic species.The root hydraulic conductivity had a maximal value of 3 x 10–7ms–1 MPa–1 at 4 weeks of age, similar to A. deserti.The radial hydraulic conductivity from the root surface to thexylem decreased and the axial conductivity along the xylem increasedwith root age, again similar to A. deserti. Thus, although rootsof A. mapisaga and A. salmiana had hydraulic properties perunit length similar to those of a desert agave, their highergrowth rates, their higher respiration rates, and the greatersoil volume explored by their roots than for various desertsucculents apparently helped support their high above-groundbiomass productivity Key words: Crassulacean acid metabolism, productivity, root elongation rate, root system, water uptake  相似文献   

11.
Desert succulents resume substantial water uptake within 1–2 d of the cessation of drought, but the changes in root structure and hydraulic conductivity underlying such recovery are largely unknown. In the monocotyledonous leaf succulent Agave deserti Engelm. substantial root mortality occurred only for lateral roots near the soil surface; nearly all main roots were alive at 180 d of drought. New main roots were initiated and grew up to 320 mm at soil water potentials lower than – 5·0 MPa, utilizing water from the shoot. The hydraulic conductivity of distal root regions decreased 62% by 45 d of drought and 70% thereafter. After 7 d of rewetting, root hydraulic conductivity was restored following 45 d of drought but not after 90 and 180 d. The production of new lateral roots and the renewed apical elongation of main roots occurred 7–11 d after rewetting following 180 d of drought. Hydraulic conductivity was higher in the distal region than at midroot and often increased again near the root base, where many endodermal cells lacked suberin lamellae. Suberization and xylem maturation were influenced by the availability of moisture, suggesting that developmental plasticity along a root allows A. deserti to capitalize on intermittent or heterogeneous supplies of water.  相似文献   

12.
Root morphology, shoot morphology, and water uptake for Agavedeserti and Ferocactus acanthodes of various sizes were studiedusing allometric relationships (y = axb) and a previously developedwater uptake model. Shoot surface area increased with shootvolume with an exponent b of 0.75 for both species. Root lengthand the ground area explored by the roots increased with shootsurface area with b's of 0.72 for A. deserti and 0.92 for F.acanthodes. Various sized individuals had about the same ratioof root length to explored ground area, with higher values occurringfor A. deserti. Predicted water uptake averaged over the exploredground area was approximately constant over a 104-fold rangein shoot surface area, suggesting that shoot size confers nointraspecific competitive advantage for water uptake. For theroot lengths per explored ground area observed in the field,water uptake was predicted to be 85 per cent of maximal; wateruptake could be increased by the production of more rain roots.When differences in shoot volume were accounted for by allometry,small plants had relatively less shoot surface area and relativelymore root length per shoot volume than did large plants, whichmay be important for the water relations of seedling establishment. Agave deserti, Ferocactus acanthodes, allometry, desert succulents, root distribution, root length, seedling growth, seedling establishment, shoot surface area, shoot volume, water uptake  相似文献   

13.
Daily and seasonal patterns in water flow and water potentialwere investigated for the Crassulacean acid metabolism succulentAgave deserti during an extended summer drought and for a periodfollowing rainfall. Field measurements of transpiration andof osmotic pressure changes over selected 24 h periods wereused as input variables for a computer model of water flow thatwas based on an electrical circuit analog of the whole plant.Parameters such as root resistance and tissue capacitance werealso varied to reflect the effects of changing plant or soilwater status. The model predicted internal water flow and waterpotential during the drought cycle and was used to assess therole of tissue osmotic properties in water uptake from the soiland in internal water redistribution. For plants under wet soil conditions, 55% of the night-timetranspiration was derived from water storage, this storage beingrecharged during the day. As drought progressed, transpirationand the nocturnal increase in osmotic pressure declined, althoughthe osmotic pressure itself increased. The difference in osmoticpressure between the water storage tissue and the chlorenchymacaused a net flow of water into the chlorenchyma after 3 weeksof drought, thereby increasing chlorenchyma turgor pressure.Simulations also indicated that a large increase in root resistancemust occur to prevent substantial water loss from the plantto the dry soil. After rainfall, recharge of plant water storagewas complete within one week, although full recovery in theamplitude of daily osmotic pressure variations took longer. Key words: Agave deserti, transpiration, water potential, water storage  相似文献   

14.
Root respiration, measured as CO2 efflux, was studied for asucculent perennial from the Sonoran Desert, Agave deserti,with a new technique using individual, attached roots. The dailypatterns of root respiration closely followed the daily patternsof root temperature for both established roots and rain roots,with higher rates during the day when root temperature averaged27?C and lower rates at night when root temperature averaged17?C. When root temperature was raised from 5?C to 40?C, rootrespiration increased about 7-fold; from 45 ?C to 55 ?C, rootrespiration decreased about 2-fold, except for old establishedroots. Root respiration per unit dry weight for both root typesdecreased with age, the initial decrease being greater for rainroots than for established roots. Root respiration rates forrain roots were reduced to zero at a soil water potential (soil)of –0.9 MPa and did not recover upon rewatering. Upondrying, root respiration rates for established roots were maintainedat about 12% of maximum, even when soil fell to –1.6 MPa,and fully recovered 1.5 d after rewatering the soil. Such responsesof rain and established roots must be taken into account whenassessing the carbon costs for the root system. Key words: Agave deserti, CO2 exchange, root respiration, temperature, soil water potential  相似文献   

15.
Survival of seedlings of the common desert succulent, Agave deserti, required unusually wet years and the protection afforded by nurse plants or other shelters. The characteristics of seed germination and of seedlings showed that water stress in the seedling stage may be the most important factor affecting establishment. Leaves wilted irreversibly at an osmotic potential of −1.6 MPa (–16 bars). Survival of seedlings required the generation of enough biomass during the first wet season to survive drought periods when the water potential of the soil was below −1.6 MPa. Lengths of individual growing seasons and subsequent droughts were obtained from rainfall records for 1961 through 1978 for a site in the western Colorado desert. The length of the first major drought following germination apparently limited establishment of Agave deserti to only one year in the last 17. The favorable year, 1967, was consistent with the estimated year of germination of the six smallest Agave deserti observed in 1,500 m2 at the field site.  相似文献   

16.
Transpiration rates and water potentials of three sympatricdesert perennials, a C3 subshrub (Encelia farinosa), a C4 bunchgrass(Hilaria rigida), and a CAM succulent (Agave deserti), wereanalysed using an electrical circuit analogue that includedresistances and capacitances for the leaves, stems, and roots.The water storage capability of the organs differed considerably,capacitance ranging over 1000-fold from the thin leaves of H,rigida to the massive leaves of A. deserti, although the capacitanceper unit volume varied only 1.9-fold. The diurnal changes inwater storage could support maximum transpiration rates of H.rigida for 4 min, E. farinosa for 7 min, and A. deserti for16 h. The time constant for equilibration of water from storageto the xylem ranged from 29 s for roots of H. rigida to 52 minfor leaves of A. deserti. Resistances for such movement wererelatively low for the succulent leaves of A. deserti and wereup to about 50-fold higher for the three organs of E. farinosa.Xylem resistances calculated using the Hagen-Poiseuille lawand measured xylem dimensions were 2.1- to 2.1-fold lower thanresistances estimated from observed water potential drops, adiscrepancy which is in agreement with other published data.Contrary to data on other plants, the xylem resistances in theroots and leaves of E. farinosa and H. rigida averaged only15% of the stem xylem resistance. Key words: Capacitance, Xylem resistance, Transpiration stream, Desert  相似文献   

17.
The constraints on water uptake imposed by individual root tissueswere examined forOpuntia ficus-indicaunder wet, drying, andrewetted soil conditions. Root hydraulic conductivity (LP) andaxial conductance (Kh) were measured for intact root segmentsfrom the distal region with an endodermis and from midroot witha periderm;LPwas then measured for each segment with successivetissues removed by dissection. Radial conductivity (LR) wascalculated fromLPandKhfor the intact segment and for the individualtissues by considering the tissue conductivities in series.Under wet conditions,LRfor intact distal root segments was lowestfor the cortex; at midroot, where cortical cells are dead,LRforthe cortex was higher and no single tissue was the predominantlimiter ofLR.LRfor the endodermis and the periderm were similarunder wet conditions. During 30d of soil drying,LRfor the distalcortex increased almost three-fold due to the death of corticalcells, whereasLRfor the midroot cortex was unaffected;LRforthe endodermis and the periderm decreased by 40 and 90%, respectively,during drying. For both root regions under wet conditions, thevascular cylinder had the highestLR, which decreased by 50–70%during 30d of soil drying. After 3d of rewetting, new lateralroots emerged, increasingLRfor the tissues outside the vascularcylinder as well as increasing uptake of an apoplastic tracerinto the xylem of both the roots and the shoot. The averageLRforintact root segments was similar under wet and rewetted conditions,but the conductivity of the tissues outside the vascular cylinderincreased after rewetting, as did the contribution of the apoplasticpathway to water uptake. Opuntia ficus-indica; prickly pear; root hydraulic conductivity; endodermis; periderm; apoplast; lateral root emergence  相似文献   

18.
Concurrent determinations of changes in hydraulic conductivity and tissue anatomy were made for roots of Agave deserti excised during drying and following rewetting in soil. At 30 d of drought, hydraulic conductivity had declined less than twofold for older nodal roots, tenfold for young nodal roots, and more than 20-fold for lateral roots (“rain roots” occurring as branches on the nodal roots). These decreases were consistent with increases in cortical lacunae caused by cell shrinkage and collapse. Similarly, reduction of lacunae in response to rewetting after 7 d of drought corresponded to levels of recovery in hydraulic conductivity, with young nodal roots showing full recovery, lateral roots returning to only 21 % of initial conductivity, and older nodal roots changing only slightly. Increases in suberization in the exodermis, endodermis, and cortex adjacent to the endodermis in response to drying coincided with decreases in hydraulic conductivity. Measurements of axial hydraulic conductance per unit length before and after pressurization indicated that embolism caused reductions in axial conductance of 98% for lateral roots, 35% for young nodal roots, and 20% for older nodal roots at 7 d of drought. Embolism, cortical lacunae, and increasing suberization caused hydraulic conductivity to decline during drought in the three root types, thereby helping limit water loss to dry soil; the recovery in hydraulic conductivity for young nodal roots after rewetting would allow them to take up water readily once soil moisture is replenished.  相似文献   

19.
Smith, J. A. C. and Nobel, P. S. 1986. Water movement and storagein a desert succulent: anatomy and rehydration kinetics forleaves of Agave deserti.—J. exp. Bot. 37: 1044–1053. Anatomic and kinetic aspects of water storage were investigatedfor the succulent leaves of the desert CAM plant, Agave deserti.An approximately linear relationship was found between the numberof vascular bundles and leaf surface area, both for leaves ofdifferent sizes and also along the length of a single leaf.The bundles, which were distributed throughout the leaf cross-section,were separated from each other by about eight water-storagecells. Even though the cell walls of the water-storage groundtissue made up only 2?5% of the cell volume, they provided about10% of the total cross-sectional area available for water transportradial to the xylem because cell-cell contact in such a directionaveraged 25% of the cell surface area. The rehydration kineticsof partially dehydrated leaf segments were resolved into threephases: (1) a relatively rapid movement into the vascular tissue(half-time of 2 min); (2) water movement into storage in theground tissue (half-time of 59 min); and (3) water movementinto the intercellular air spaces (half-time of about 10 h).Using the observed kinetics for water movement into the storagetissue and standard diffusion theory, the bulk-averaged diffusivityof water in the relatively homogeneous ground tissue (D1) was2?0 ? 10–10 m2 s–1 Using this (D1) and pathway analysis,most of the water moving from the xylem into storage in themassive leaves of A. deserti apparently occurred from cell tocell across the cell membranes rather than through the cellwalls. Key words: Agave deserti, capacitance, diffusivity, leaf anatomy, succulence, water storage  相似文献   

20.
To investigate root distribution with depth, which can affect competition for water, surface areas of young and old roots were determined in 4-cm-thick soil layers for the C3 subshrub Encelia farinosa Torrey and A. Gray, the C4 bunchgrass Pleuraphis rigida Thurber, and the CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) leaf succulent Agave deserti Engelm. At a site in the northwestern Sonoran Desert these codominant perennials had mean rooting depths of only 9-10 cm for isolated plants. Young roots had mean depths of 5-6 cm after a winter wet period, but 11-13 cm after a summer wet period. Young roots were most profuse in the winter for E. farinosa, which has the lowest optimum temperature for root growth, and in the summer for P. rigida, which has the highest optimum temperature. Roots for interspecific pairs in close proximity averaged 2-3 cm shallower for A. deserti and a similar distance deeper for the other two species compared with isolated plants, suggesting partial spatial separation of their root niches when the plants are in a competitive situation. For plants with a similar root surface area, the twofold greater leaf area and twofold higher maximal transpiration rate of E. farinosa were consistent with its higher root hydraulic conductivity, leading to a fourfold higher estimated maximal water uptake rate than for P. rigida. Continuous water uptake accounted for the shoot water loss by A. deserti, which has a high shoot water-storage capacity. A lower minimum leaf water potential for P. rigida than for A. deserti indicates greater ability to extract water from a drying soil, suggesting that temporal niche separation for water uptake also occurs.  相似文献   

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