AI Article Synopsis

  • Succulence refers to the ability of plants to store water in their tissues, helping them function and survive in dry conditions.* -
  • A study with nine shrub species showed that higher leaf and stem succulence leads to more usable water and a better ability to buffer changes in soil moisture.* -
  • However, while root succulence helps prolong the time before plants desiccate, it doesn’t necessarily delay overall water loss, indicating different roles for succulence in aboveground vs. root systems.*

Article Abstract

Succulence is a trait that describes water storage in plant organs and tissues regardless of life form. Plants use the stored water to maintain physiological function and delay desiccation. However, it is unclear whether succulence in leaves, stems and roots of woody plants delays desiccation, whether it provides 'utilizable water' to maintain physiological function, or buffers changes in water status in drying soils through capacitance. We conducted a pot dry-down experiment with nine shrub species to determine whether woody plants with greater leaf, stem, or root succulence have greater shoot utilizable water or capacitance. We also investigated whether greater succulence delays desiccation, represented by cumulative VPD, until evapotranspiration ceased or until utilizable water was exhausted. Greater leaf and stem succulence were strongly related to greater shoot utilizable water and capacitance. However, desiccation time was not delayed in plants with greater total shoot succulence, utilizable water, or capacitance. Instead, woody plants with greater root succulence had longer desiccation times. This suggests that woody plants use aboveground succulence to maintain physiological function and water status during drought, whereas root succulence extends desiccation time. Our study improves the mechanistic understanding of how woody plants use stored water to survive in dryland ecosystems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.14616DOI Listing

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