نتایج جستجو برای: xylem water potential

تعداد نتایج: 1560812  

Journal: :Plant physiology 2014
Yong-Jiang Zhang Fulton E Rockwell James K Wheeler N Michele Holbrook

Declines in leaf hydraulic conductance (Kleaf) with increasing water stress have been attributed to cavitation of the leaf xylem. However, in the leaves of conifers, the reversible collapse of transfusion tracheids may provide an alternative explanation. Using Taxus baccata, a conifer species without resin, we developed a modified rehydration technique that allows the separation of declines in ...

2005
J. S. SPERRY N. Z. SALIENDRA W. T. POCKMAN H. COCHARD P. CRUIZIAT S. D. DAVIS F. W. EWERS M. T. TYREE

Pressure probe measurements have been interpreted as showing that xylem pressures below c. -0-4MPa do not exist and that pressure chamber measurements of lower negative pressures are invalid. We present new evidence supporting the pressure chamber technique and the existence of xylem pressures well below -0-4 MPa. We deduced xylem pressures in water-stressed stem xylem from the following experi...

2012
Francesca Secchi Maciej A. Zwieniecki

It is assumed that the refilling of drought-induced embolism requires the creation of an osmotic gradient between xylem parenchyma cells and vessel lumens to generate the water efflux needed to fill the void. To assess the mechanism of embolism repair, it is crucial to determine if plants can up-regulate the efflux of osmotically active substances into embolized vessels and identify the major c...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2004
Wagdy Y Sobeih Ian C Dodd Mark A Bacon Donald Grierson William J Davies

Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Ailsa Craig) plants were grown with roots split between two soil columns. After plant establishment, water was applied daily to one (partial root-zone drying-PRD) or both (well-watered control-WW) columns. Water was withheld from the other column in the PRD treatment, to expose some roots to drying soil. Soil and plant water status were monitored daily ...

2012
Michael J. Clearwater Zhiwei Luo Sam Eng Chye Ong Peter Blattmann T. Grant Thorp

Indirect evidence suggests that water supply to fleshy fruits during the final stages of development occurs through the phloem, with the xylem providing little water, or acting as a pathway for water loss back to the plant. This inference was tested by examining the water balance and vascular functioning of ripening kiwifruit berries (Actinidia chinensis var. chinensis 'Hort16A') exhibiting a p...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1971
J M Duniway

Although the pressure chamber has gained wide acceptance as a convenient method for the measurement of plant water status, the relationship between the pressure observed in the chamber and other parameters of plant water status remains unclear. If one assumes that the spatial arrangement of water in the shoot is the same under pressure as it was in the intact plant, the positive pressure (P) an...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1973
B Klepper F J Molz C M Peterson

Low temperature affects the lateral movement of water across the xylem-phloem boundary in intact cotton stems. There is a reduction in the effective diffusion coefficient relating free energy flux to water potential gradients with an associated increase in resistance to water flow. Detached phloem and excised leaves do not show this effect of low temperature. Experiments on stem section halves ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2002
Hervé Cochard Lluis Coll Xavier Le Roux Thierry Améglio

The objectives of the study were to identify the relevant hydraulic parameters associated with stomatal regulation during water stress and to test the hypothesis of a stomatal control of xylem embolism in walnut (Juglans regia x nigra) trees. The hydraulic characteristics of the sap pathway were experimentally altered with different methods to alter plant transpiration (Eplant) and stomatal con...

Journal: :Tree physiology 2016
Shan Li Marion Feifel Zohreh Karimi Bernhard Schuldt Brendan Choat Steven Jansen

Establishing physiological thresholds to drought-induced mortality in a range of plant species is crucial in understanding how plants respond to severe drought. Here, five common European tree species were selected (Acer campestre L., Acer pseudoplatanus L., Carpinus betulus L., Corylus avellana L. and Fraxinus excelsior L.) to study their hydraulic thresholds to mortality. Photosynthetic param...

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