AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydathodes in the Crassula genus are confirmed to assist in foliar water uptake (FWU) in addition to their usual role in water exudation.
  • Research showed that FWU is beneficial in arid regions of southern Africa where high humidity leads to fog and dew, allowing for moisture harvesting from the atmosphere.
  • The study suggests that FWU ability exists across various Crassula species, regardless of geographical location or surface wettability, with unique leaf structures playing a role in enhancing this water uptake.

Article Abstract

Hydathodes are usually associated with water exudation in plants. However, foliar water uptake (FWU) through the hydathodes has long been suspected in the leaf-succulent genus Crassula (Crassulaceae), a highly diverse group in southern Africa, and, to our knowledge, no empirical observations exist in the literature that unequivocally link FWU to hydathodes in this genus. FWU is expected to be particularly beneficial on the arid western side of southern Africa, where up to 50% of Crassula species occur and where periodically high air humidity leads to fog and/or dew formation. To investigate if hydathode-mediated FWU is operational in different Crassula species, we used the apoplastic fluorescent tracer Lucifer Yellow in combination with different imaging techniques. Our images of dye-treated leaves confirm that hydathode-mediated FWU does indeed occur in Crassula and that it might be widespread across the genus. Hydathodes in Crassula serve as moisture-harvesting structures, besides their more common purpose of guttation, an adaptation that has likely played an important role in the evolutionary history of the genus. Our observations suggest that ability for FWU is independent of geographical distribution and not restricted to arid environments under fog influence, as FWU is also operational in Crassula species from the rather humid eastern side of southern Africa. Our observations point towards no apparent link between FWU ability and overall leaf surface wettability in Crassula. Instead, the hierarchically sculptured leaf surfaces of several Crassula species may facilitate FWU due to hydrophilic leaf surface microdomains, even in seemingly hydrophobic species. Overall, these results confirm the ecophysiological relevance of hydathode-mediated FWU in Crassula and reassert the importance of atmospheric humidity for some arid-adapted plant groups.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pce.14743DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

crassula species
20
southern africa
16
hydathode-mediated fwu
12
crassula
10
fwu
10
foliar water
8
water uptake
8
fwu hydathodes
8
link fwu
8
side southern
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!