Flooding induces a suite of adaptive plastic responses in the grass Paspalum dilatatum
Open Access
- 1 November 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 152 (2) , 291-299
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0028-646x.2001.257_1.x
Abstract
Summary: We studied individual responses to flooding in the perennial grass Paspalum dilatatum, a widespread species in the Flooding Pampa of Argentina, using plants established in species‐diverse grassland microcosms. Flooding effects were evaluated on root and leaf sheath anatomy and shoot morphological traits. Leaf water status and CO2 exchange rates were monitored in flooded and unflooded plants under changing, natural and controlled atmospheric conditions. Root porosity and leaf sheath aerenchyma increased with flooding. Leaf extension rates and tiller height were also higher in flooded plants, which resulted in a large fraction of the shoot architecture emerging above the water surface. Flooding enhanced stomatal conductance, leaf water potential and net photosynthesis, especially under conditions leading to high air‐vapour pressure deficits. Therefore, flooded plants experienced fewer water deficits during periods of high atmospheric evaporative demand. P. dilatatum showed tight regulation of water and carbon relations under severe soil‐oxygen deficiency, even in the presence of natural competitors. The suite of adaptive responses documented here might help to explain the observed increase in abundance of this species during extensive floods.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adaptations to Flooding Stress: From Plant Community to MoleculePlant Biology, 1999
- Flooding Reverted Grazing Effects on Plant Community Structure in Mesocosms of Lowland GrasslandOikos, 1999
- Responses to flooding intensity in Leontodon taraxacoidesNew Phytologist, 1999
- Effects of flooding, salinity and herbivory on coastal plant communities, Louisiana, United StatesOecologia, 1998
- Sensitivity to ethylene: the key factor in submergence-induced shoot elongation of RumexPlant, Cell & Environment, 1996
- Waterlogging responses of Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth.Oecologia, 1992
- Growth and Survival Responses ofRumexSpecies to Flooded and Submerged Conditions: The Importance of Shoot Elongation, Underwater Photosynthesis and Reserve CarbohydratesJournal of Experimental Botany, 1990
- Internal oxygen transport inRumex species and its significance for respiration under hypoxic conditionsPlant and Soil, 1990
- Measurement of root porosity (volume of root air spaceEnvironmental and Experimental Botany, 1988
- THE ANATOMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ROOTS AND PLANT RESPONSE TO SOIL FLOODINGNew Phytologist, 1987