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The aerenchymatous phellem of Lythrum salicaria (L.): a pathway for gas transport and its role in flood tolerance
Authors:Stevens Kevin J  Peterson R Larry  Reader Richard J
Affiliation:Department of Botany, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Abstract:While the importance of cortical aerenchyma in flood tolerance is well established, this pathway for gaseous exchange is often destroyed during secondary growth. For woody species, therefore, an additional pathway must develop for oxygen to reach submerged tissues. In this paper we examine the potential for the aerenchymatous phellem (cork) of Lythrum salicaria L. to provide a pathway for gas transport from shoots to roots and assess its importance in flood tolerance. Plants in which the continuity of the aerenchymatous phellem between shoots and roots was broken showed a significant reduction in oxygen levels in roots, but no difference in carbon dioxide levels compared with controls that retained an intact phellem. These plants also had a greater total shoot height and shoot dry weight, and an increase in shoot/root dry mass ratios compared with controls. Total dry weight was not significantly affected by this treatment. This study is the first to show that the aerenchymatous phellem can provide a pathway for gaseous exchange between roots and shoots and can influence plant morphology and patterns of resource allocation. This suggests that this tissue may play a significant role in the flood tolerance of a woody plant.
Keywords:Lythrum salicaria   purple loosestrife   flooding   aerenchyma   oxygen transport   gas chromatography   phellem   roots   shoots   secondary growth   flood tolerance   wetlands.
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