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Functional xylem characteristics associated with drought-induced embolism in angiosperms

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 236, Issue 6, Pages 2019-2036

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.18447

Keywords

drought; embolism; fluid transport; pit membrane thickness; plant-water relations; vessel diameter; wood anatomy; xylem sap

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council NWO [ALWOP.488]
  2. REGION project VITIPIN
  3. Grand Programme de Recherche Bordeaux Plant Science (BPS, WP Waterloo)
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [383393940]

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Studying hydraulic failure in plants is crucial for understanding reduced productivity and mortality. There is a need to reevaluate the relationship between vessel diameter and vulnerability caused by drought-induced embolism. Nanoscale biophysical processes play a key role in determining the formation and spread of embolism.
Hydraulic failure resulting from drought-induced embolism in the xylem of plants is a key determinant of reduced productivity and mortality. Methods to assess this vulnerability are difficult to achieve at scale, leading to alternative metrics and correlations with more easily measured traits. These efforts have led to the longstanding and pervasive assumed mechanistic link between vessel diameter and vulnerability in angiosperms. However, there are at least two problems with this assumption that requires critical re-evaluation: (1) our current understanding of drought-induced embolism does not provide a mechanistic explanation why increased vessel width should lead to greater vulnerability, and (2) the most recent advancements in nanoscale embolism processes suggest that vessel diameter is not a direct driver. Here, we review data from physiological and comparative wood anatomy studies, highlighting the potential anatomical and physicochemical drivers of embolism formation and spread. We then put forward key knowledge gaps, emphasising what is known, unknown and speculation. A meaningful evaluation of the diameter-vulnerability link will require a better mechanistic understanding of the biophysical processes at the nanoscale level that determine embolism formation and spread, which will in turn lead to more accurate predictions of how water transport in plants is affected by drought.

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