How are leaves plumbed inside a branch? Differences in leaf-to-leaf hydraulic sectoriality among six temperate tree species
Open Access
- 27 June 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Experimental Botany
- Vol. 56 (418) , 2267-2273
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/eri233
Abstract
The transport of water, sugar, and nutrients in trees is restricted to specific vascular pathways, and thus organs may be relatively isolated from one another (i.e. sectored). Strongly sectored leaf-to-leaf pathways have been shown for the transport of sugar and signal molecules within a shoot, but not previously for water transport. The hydraulic sectoriality of leaf-to-leaf pathways was determined for current year shoots of six temperate deciduous tree species (three ring-porous: Castanea dentata, Fraxinus americana, and Quercus rubra, and three diffuse-porous: Acer saccharum, Betula papyrifera, and Liriodendron tulipifera). Hydraulic sectoriality was determined using dye staining and a hydraulic method. In the dye method, leaf blades were removed and dye was forced into the most proximal petiole. For each petiole the vascular traces that were shared with the proximal petiole were counted. For other shoots, measurements were made of the leaf-area-specific hydraulic conductivity for the leaf-to-leaf pathways (kLL). In five out of the six species, patterns of sectoriality reflected phyllotaxy; both the sharing of vascular bundles between leaves and kLL were higher for orthostichous than non-orthostichous leaf pairs. For each species, leaf-to-leaf sectoriality was determined as the proportional differences between non-orthostichous versus orthostichous leaf pairs in their staining of shared vascular bundles and in their kLL; for the six species these two indices of sectoriality were strongly correlated (R2=0.94; P kLL-based sectoriality, and ring-porous species were more sectored than diffuse-porous species. Differential leaf-to-leaf sectoriality has implications for species-specific co-ordination of leaf gas exchange and water relations within a branch, especially during fluctuations in irradiance and water and nutrient availability.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional and ecological xylem anatomyPerspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, 2001
- Comparative Wood AnatomyPublished by Springer Nature ,2001
- Sectoriality and physiological organisation in herbaceous plants: an overviewPlant Ecology, 1996
- Influence of xylem vascular architecture on the translocation of phosphorus from nodal roots in a genotype of Trifolium repens during undisturbed growthNew Phytologist, 1996
- Radially Sectored Hydraulic Pathways in the Xylem of Thuja occidentalis as Revealed by the Use of DyesInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 1994
- Geostatistical Patterns of Soil Heterogeneity Around Individual Perennial PlantsJournal of Ecology, 1993
- Assimilate movement dictates remote sites of wound-induced gene expression in poplar leaves.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991
- Manual of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent CanadaPublished by New York Botanical Garden ,1991
- Pressure and Flow Relations in Vascular Bundles of the Tomato PlantPlant Physiology, 1966
- Patterns of Water Movement in Forest TreesBotanical Gazette, 1963