4.4 Article

Testing the 'microbubble effect' using the Cavitron technique to measure xylem water extraction curves

Journal

AOB PLANTS
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plw011

Keywords

Cavitation resistance; embolism; plant hydraulics; vessel length artefact; water relations

Funding

  1. programme 'Investments for the Future' (XYLOFOREST) from the French National Agency for Research [ANR-10-EQPX-16]
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (United States) [DGE-1326120]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Opportunities Worldwide Fellowship (United States)
  4. Chateaubriand Fellowship (honorary) (France)

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Plant resistance to xylemcavitation is a major drought adaptation trait and is essential to characterizing vulnerability to climate change. Cavitation resistance can be determined with vulnerability curves. In the past decade, new techniques have increased the ease and speed at which vulnerability curves are produced. However, these new techniques are also subject to new artefacts, especially as related to long-vesselled species. We tested the reliability of the 'flow rotor' centrifuge technique, the so-called Cavitron, and investigated one potential mechanism behind the open vessel artefact in centrifuge-based vulnerability curves: themicrobubble effect. The microbubble effect hypothesizes that microbubbles introduced to open vessels, either through sample flushing or injection of solution, travel by buoyancy or mass flow towards the axis of rotation where they artefactually nucleate cavitation. To test the microbubble effect, we constructed vulnerability curves using three different rotor sizes for five species with varying maximum vessel length, as well as water extraction curves that are constructed without injection of solution into the rotor. We found that the Cavitron technique is robust to measure resistance to cavitation in tracheid-bearing and short-vesselled species, but not for long-vesselled ones. Moreover, our results support the microbubble effect hypothesis as the major cause for the open vessel artefact in long-vesselled species.

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