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Variation in xylem structure from tropics to tundra: Evidence from vestured pits Naturalis
Jansen, S.; Baas, P.; Gasson, P.; Lens, F.; Smets, E..
Bordered pits play an important role in permitting water flow among adjacent tracheary elements in flowering plants. Variation in the bordered pit structure is suggested to be adaptive in optimally balancing the conflict between hydraulic efficiency (conductivity) and safety from air entry at the pit membrane (air seeding). The possible function of vestured pits, which are bordered pits with protuberances from the secondary cell wall of the pit chamber, could be increased hydraulic resistance or minimized vulnerability to air seeding. These functional hypotheses have to be harmonized with the notion that the vestured or nonvestured nature of pits contains strong phylogenetic signals (i.e., often characterize large species-rich clades with broad ecological...
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: Xylem structure; Vestured pits; Scalariform perforation plates; Simple perforation plates; Hydraulic system; Drought stress; 42.42.
Ano: 2004 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/423503
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Embolism resistance as a key mechanism to understand adaptive plant strategies Naturalis
Lens, F.; Tixier, A.; Cochard, H.; Sperry, J.S.; Jansen, S.; Herbette, S..
One adaptation of plants to cope with drought or frost stress is to develop wood that is able to withstand the formation and distribution of air bubbles (emboli) in its water conducting xylem cells under negative pressure. The ultrastructure of interconduit pits strongly affects drought-induced embolism resistance, but also mechanical properties of the xylem are involved. The first experimental evidence for a lower embolism resistance in stems of herbaceous plants compared to stems of their secondarily woody descendants further supports this mechanical-functional trade-off. An integrative approach combining (ultra)structural observations of the xylem, safetyefficiency aspects of the hydraulic pipeline, and xylem–phloem interactions will shed more light on...
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: Embolism resistance; Adaptive plant strategies; Drought stress; Air bubbles (emboli); Xylem; 42.42.
Ano: 2013 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/453852
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