DEHYDRATION INJURY AND RESISTANCE
- 1 January 1941
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 16 (1) , 171-179
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.1.171
Abstract
Plant cells of cabbage, Cornus and Catalpa in the frost hardened and unhardened states show parallel resistance to drought, frost and plasmolysis respectively. The maximum plas-molysis that can be withstood depends on the point at which an irreversible stiffening, presumably coagulation, of the cortical zone of cytoplasm occurs. The maximum resistance of cells to the other modes of dehydration probably depends on the same property and this in turn on the hy-drophily of the protoplasmic colloids.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE RELATION OF CABBAGE HARDINESS TO BOUND WATER, UNFROZEN WATER, AND CELL CONTRACTION WHEN FROZENPlant Physiology, 1939
- The Physical State of Protoplasm with Special Reference to Its SurfaceThe American Naturalist, 1938
- THE FROST-HARDENING MECHANISM OF PLANT CELLSPlant Physiology, 1937