4.5 Article

The criteria for biomass partitioning of the current shoot: Water transport versus mechanical support

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 91, Issue 12, Pages 1949-1959

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.91.12.1949

Keywords

Angiosperms; gymnosperms; hydraulic conductivity; mechanical stability; tree architecture

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In this study, we determine the theoretical criteria for biomass partitioning into the leaf and stem of the current shoot, using two quantitative models. The water transport model, based on the biochemical model of CO, assimilation, predicts the relationship between the water transport capacity per biomass investment in the stein (stein mass specific conductivity) and the partitioning of biomass that maximizes shoot productivity. The mechanical support model, based on Euler's buckling formula, predicts the relationship between the mechanical strength per biomass investment in the stein (the inverse relationship of stein mass density) and the partitioning of biomass to avoid mechanical failures such as lodging. These models predict the stein properties of mass specific conductivity and stem mass density that result in optimum partitioning just sufficient to provide adequate water transport and static mechanical Support. In reality, the stein properties of plants differ from those predicted for optimum partitioning: the partitioning of biomass in the current shoot of both angiosperms and gymnosperms is mainly governed by the mechanical support criterion, although gymnosperms are probably more affected by the water transport criterion. This tendency is supported by actual measurements of biomass partitioning in plants.

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