Journal
ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
Volume 59, Issue 1, Pages 19-27Publisher
SPRINGER FRANCE
DOI: 10.1051/forest:2001002
Keywords
beech (Fagus sylvatica L.); xylem embolism; stomatal regulation; irradiance; acclimation
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The stomatal control of embolism in Fagus sylvatica L. was analysed in response to crown position and experimental changes of trunk hydraulic resistance. On one mature beech tree deep cuts were made in the trunk to increase the resistance to water transfert. We followed the changes in leaf and xylem water potential and stomatal conductance after the cuts at three levels within the canopy. We characterised vulnerability to cavitation for branches taken from two levels of irradiance (sun-exposed branches and shaded ones). Some differences appeared between shade and sun-exposed branches. When the leaf water potential dropped, stomatal conductances decreased earlier and faster in the shade branches. These results are well correlated with vulnerability to cavitation, shade branches being more vulnerable than sun-acclimated branches. Xylem water potential levels producing fifty percent loss of hydraulic conductivity were lower in sun-exposed branches than in shade grown ones (-3.1 MPa vs. -2.5 MPa on average). Xylem water potentials that induced stomatal closure were above the threshold-value inducing cavitation both for shade and sun-exposed branches. We confirmed that vulnerability to cavitation in Fagus sylvatica can acclimate to contrasting ambient light conditions, and we conclued that stomatal response to water stress occured early and sufficiently fast to protect xylem from dysfunction.
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