نتایج جستجو برای: xylem

تعداد نتایج: 4505  

1998
M. J. LINTON

Pinyon–Juniper communities are found throughout the high deserts of the south-western United States, predominantly at elevations between 1500 and 2000 m (Johnston 1994). The Pinyon–Juniper habitat is semiarid, receiving c. 40 cm of yearly precipitation. The actual rainfall over a local elevational gradient, however, can vary more than twofold (West 1988). Juniper dominates in the lower, drier s...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2004
Kaisa M Nieminen Leila Kauppinen Ykä Helariutta

Wood, or secondary xylem, is a water-conductive and supportive vascular tissue highly characteristic of trees. In addition to parenchymatous cells adapted for storage and transport functions, wood is mainly composed of various vertically elongated cell types. These are classified either as tracheary elements or fibers, both of which are characterized with extensive secondary cell wall thickenin...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2010
Peter Kitin Steven L Voelker Frederick C Meinzer Hans Beeckman Steven H Strauss Barbara Lachenbruch

Of 14 transgenic poplar genotypes (Populus tremula × Populus alba) with antisense 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase that were grown in the field for 2 years, five that had substantial lignin reductions also had greatly reduced xylem-specific conductivity compared with that of control trees and those transgenic events with small reductions in lignin. For the two events with the lowest xylem lignin c...

2012
Ye Wang Bo Li Mingwei Du A. Egrinya Eneji Baomin Wang Liusheng Duan Zhaohu Li Xiaoli Tian

To elucidate the phytohormonal basis of the feedback regulation of leaf senescence induced by potassium (K) deficiency in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), two cultivars contrasting in sensitivity to K deficiency were self- and reciprocally grafted hypocotyl-to-hypocotyl, using standard grafting (one scion grafted onto one rootstock), Y grafting (two scions grafted onto one rootstock), and invert...

2004
Kaisa M. Nieminen Leila Kauppinen

Wood, or secondary xylem, is a water-conductive and supportive vascular tissue highly characteristic of trees. In addition to parenchymatous cells adapted for storage and transport functions, wood is mainly composed of various vertically elongated cell types. These are classified either as tracheary elements or fibers, both of which are characterized with extensive secondary cell wall thickenin...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2005
Bhaskar R Bondada Mark A Matthews Kenneth A Shackel

A number of studies have shown a transition from a primarily xylem to a primarily phloem flow of water as fleshy fruits develop, and the current hypothesis to explain this transition, particularly in grape (Vitis vinifera L.) berries, is that the vascular tissue (tracheids) become non-functional as a result of post-veraison berry growth. In most studies, pedicels have been dipped in a vial cont...

2017
G. L. Beier B. W. Held1 C A. Blanchette

Editor: S. Woodward Summary Five cultivars and two populations of wildtype seedlings of American elm (Ulmus americana), 3 and 4 years old, were examined for differences in their abilities to compartmentalize and resist infection by artificially inoculating with Ophiostoma novo-ulmi. Morphological characteristics of tree defence, often referred to as the compartmentalization of decay in trees mo...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2010
Wen-Ling Ye B Alan Wood Jacqueline L Stroud P John Andralojc Andrea Raab Steve P McGrath Jörg Feldmann Fang-Jie Zhao

How arsenic (As) is transported in phloem remains unknown. To help answer this question, we quantified the chemical species of As in phloem and xylem exudates of castor bean (Ricinus communis) exposed to arsenate [As(V)], arsenite [As(III)], monomethylarsonic acid [MMA(V)], or dimethylarsinic acid. In the As(V)- and As(III)-exposed plants, As(V) was the main species in xylem exudate (55%-83%) w...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2001
M Génard S Fishman G Vercambre J G Huguet C Bussi J Besset R Habib

A comprehensive model of stem and root diameter variation was developed. The stem (or root) was represented using two coaxial cylinders corresponding with the mature xylem and the extensible tissues. The extensible tissues were assumed to behave as a single cell separated from the mature xylem by a virtual membrane. The mature xylem and the extensible tissues are able to dilate with temperature...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2006
Mark A Else June M Taylor Christopher J Atkinson

In flooded soils, the rapid effects of decreasing oxygen availability on root metabolic activity are likely to generate many potential chemical signals that may impact on stomatal apertures. Detached leaf transpiration tests showed that filtered xylem sap, collected at realistic flow rates from plants flooded for 2 h and 4 h, contained one or more factors that reduced stomatal apertures. The cl...

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