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Determinants of thermal balance in the Hawaiian giant rosette plant,Argyroxiphium sandwicense
Authors:P J Melcher  G Goldstein  F C Meinzer  B Minyard  T W Giambelluca  L L Loope
Institution:(1) Department of Botany, University of Hawaii, 3190 Maile Way, 96822 Honolulu, USA;(2) Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association, PO Box 1057, 96701 Aiea, USA;(3) Department of Geography, University of Hawaii, 2424 Maile Way, 96822 Honolulu, USA;(4) Haleakala National Park, Box 369, 96768 Makawao, USA
Abstract:The effects of leaf pubescence and rosette geometry on thermal balance were studied in a subspecies of a Hawaiian giant rosette plant, Argyroxiphium sandwicense. This species, a member of the silversword alliance, grows above 2000 m elevation in the alpine zone of two Hawaiian volcanoes. Its highly pubescent leaves are very reflective (absorptance in the 400–700 nm waveband=0.44). Temperature of the expanded leaves was very similar to, or even lower than, air temperature during clear days, which was somewhat surprising given that solar radiation at the high elevation sites where this species grows can exceed 1100 W m–2. However, the temperature of the apical bud, which is located in the center of the parabolic rosette, was usually 25°C higher than air temperature at midday. Experimental manipulations in the field indicated that incoming solar radiation being focussed towards the center of the rosette resulted in higher temperatures of the apical bud. Attenuation of wind speed inside the rosette, which increased the thickness of the boundary layer surrounding the apical bud, also contributed to higher temperatures. The heating effect on the apical bud of the large parabolic rosette, which apparently enhances the rates of physiological processes in the developing leaves, may exclude the species from lower elevations by producing lethal tissue temperatures. Model simulations of apical bud temperatures at different elevations and laboratory estimates of the temperature threshold for permanent heat injury predicted that the lower altitude limit should be approximately 1900 m, which is reasonably close to the lower limit of distribution of A. sandwicense on Haleakala volcano.
Keywords:Argyroxiphium sandwicense  Energy balance  Heat tolerance  Leaf pubescence  Silversword
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