4.6 Article

Rare pits, large vessels and extreme vulnerability to cavitation in a ring-porous tree species

期刊

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
卷 193, 期 3, 页码 713-720

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.03984.x

关键词

air-seeding mechanism; drought responses; ecological wood anatomy; embolism refilling; rare pit hypothesis; ring-porous trees; vulnerability curves; xylem cavitation

资金

  1. University of Utah
  2. [NSF-IBN-0743148]
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences
  4. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [743148] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The rare pit hypothesis predicts that the extensive inter-vessel pitting in large early-wood vessels of ring-porous trees should render many of these vessels extremely vulnerable to cavitation by air-seeding. This prediction was tested in Quercus gambelii. Cavitation was assessed from native hydraulic conductivity at field sap tension and in dehydrated branches. Single-vessel air injections gave air-seeding pressures through vessel files; these data were used to estimate air-seeding pressures for inter-vessel walls and pits. Extensive cavitation occurred at xylem sap tensions below 1 MPa. Refilling occurred below 0.5 MPa and was inhibited by phloem girdling. Remaining vessels cavitated over a wide range to above 4 MPa. Similarly, 40% of injected vessel files air-seeded below 1.0 MPa, whereas the remainder seeded over a wide range exceeding 5 MPa. Inter-vessel walls averaged 1.02 MPa air-seeding pressure, similar and opposite to the mean cavitation tension of 1.22 MPa. Consistent with the rare pit hypothesis, only 7% of inter-vessel pits were estimated to air-seed by 1.22 MPa. The results confirm the rare pit prediction that a significant fraction of large vessels in Q.gambelii experience high probability of failure by air-seeding.

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