Capacitive water release and internal leaf water relocation delay drought-induced cavitation in African Maesopsis eminii.

Tree Physiol

Laboratory of Plant Ecology, Department of Applied Ecology and Environmental Biology, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University, Coupure links 653, B-9000Ghent, Belgium.

Published: April 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the African tree species Maesopsis eminii responds to drought, highlighting that relying solely on the measurement of xylem hydraulic conductivity loss (ψ50) may not fully capture its resilience strategies.
  • Researchers utilized methods like measuring acoustic emissions and weight loss during dehydration to assess M. eminii's vulnerability to drought and understand its hydraulic functioning, revealing that the species shows a unique desiccation delay strategy involving internal leaf water relocation and anatomical features.
  • The findings emphasize that hydraulic capacitance and anatomical traits are crucial for comprehending M. eminii's drought survival tactics, though caution is advised against generalizing results from young seedlings to mature trees because their characteristics may differ significantly.

Article Abstract

The impact of drought on the hydraulic functioning of important African tree species, like Maesopsis eminii Engl., is poorly understood. To map the hydraulic response to drought-induced cavitation, sole reliance on the water potential at which 50% loss of xylem hydraulic conductivity (ψ50) occurs might be limiting and at times misleading as the value alone does not give a comprehensive overview of strategies evoked by M. eminii to cope with drought. This article therefore uses a methodological framework to study the different aspects of drought-induced cavitation and water relations in M. eminii. Hydraulic functioning of whole-branch segments was investigated during bench-top dehydration. Cumulative acoustic emissions and continuous weight measurements were used to quantify M. eminii's vulnerability to drought-induced cavitation and hydraulic capacitance. Wood structural traits, including wood density, vessel area, diameter and wall thickness, vessel grouping index, solitary vessel index and vessel wall reinforcement, were used to underpin observed physiological responses. On average, M. eminii's ψ50 (±SE) was -1.9 ± 0.1 MPa, portraying its xylem as drought vulnerable, just as one would expect for a common tropical pioneer. However, M. eminii additionally employed an interesting desiccation delay strategy, fuelled by internal relocation of leaf water, hydraulic capacitance and the presence of parenchyma around the xylem vessels. Our findings suggest that exclusive dependence on ψ50 would have misdirected our assessments of M. eminii's drought stress vulnerability. Hydraulic capacitance linked to anatomy and leaf-water relocation behaviour was equally important to better understand M. eminii's drought survival strategies. Because our study was conducted on branches of 3-year-old greenhouse-grown M. eminii seedlings, the findings cannot be simply extrapolated to adult M. eminii trees or their mature wood, because structural and physiological plant properties change with age. The techniques and methodological framework used in this study are, however, transferable to other species regardless of age.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/treephys/tpw128DOI Listing

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