Accuracy and Usefulness of Psychrometer and Pressure Chamber for Evaluating Water Potentials of Pinus radiata Needles
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Functional Plant Biology
- Vol. 9 (5) , 499-507
- https://doi.org/10.1071/pp9820499
Abstract
Pressure chamber evaluations of xylem sap pressure potential (P) and thermocouple psychrometric evaluations of average water potential (Ψl) in needles from both transpiring and non-transpiring pine trees (Pinus radiata D. Don) were compared in order to determine the relative accuracy and usefulness of these methods for assessing Ψl. Markedly different but linear P v. Ψl relationships were obtained for pine needles of different age and also for the case where resin exudation masked the xylem and led to a 'resin error'. Evidence suggests that these differences are mainly due to injection and resin errors in pressure chamber determinations totalling as much as 1 MPa (a 10 bar). The psychrometric method appears to be the much more accurate. Radial water potential gradients across leaves did not result in differences between evaluations of P and Ψl, at least in P. radiata. The need for multiple 'calibrations' of the pressure chamber and the fundamental uncertainty about the constancy of such calibrations on the one hand and the slowness of the excised-needle psychrometer on the other can restrict the usefulness of these methods.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Errors Arising From Rapid Water Loss in the Measurement of Leaf Water Potential by the Pressure Chamber TechniqueFunctional Plant Biology, 1980
- Leaf Water Potentials Measured with a Pressure ChamberPlant Physiology, 1967
- Comparison of Water Potentials in Leaves as Measured by Two Types of Thermocouple PsychrometerAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1965