4.7 Article

Water relations under root chilling in a sensitive and tolerant tomato species

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 971-979

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2004.01200.x

Keywords

chilling injury; chilling tolerance; hydraulic conductance; stomatal conductance

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The shoots of cultivated tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cv. T5) wilt if their roots are exposed to chilling temperatures of around 5 degreesC. Under the same treatment, a chilling-tolerant congener (Lycopersicon hirsutum LA 1778) maintains shoot turgor. To determine the physiological basis of this differential response, the effect of chilling on both excised roots and roots of intact plants in pressure chambers were investigated. In excised roots and intact plants, root hydraulic conductance declined with temperature to nearly twice the extent expected from the temperature dependence of the viscosity of water, but the response was similar in both species. The species differed markedly, however, in stomatal behaviour: in L. hirsutum, stomatal conductance declined as root temperatures were lowered, whereas the stomata of L. esculentum remained open until the roots reached 5 degreesC, and the plants became flaccid and suffered damage. Grafted plants with the shoots of one genotype and roots of another indicated that the differential stomatal behaviour during root chilling has distinct shoot and root components.

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