4.7 Article

A network model links wood anatomy to xylem tissue hydraulic behaviour and vulnerability to cavitation

期刊

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
卷 41, 期 12, 页码 2718-2730

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.13415

关键词

xylem; network; Acer; model; hydraulics; cavitation; vulnerability curve; wood; anatomy

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF-AGS-1644382, NSF-DGE-1068871, NSF-EAR-1344703, NSF-IOS-1754893, NSF-DEB-1557176]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Plant xylem response to drought is routinely represented by a vulnerability curve (VC). Despite the significance of VCs, the connection between anatomy and tissue-level hydraulic response to drought remains a subject of inquiry. We present a numerical model of water flow in flowering plant xylem that combines current knowledge on diffuse-porous anatomy and embolism spread to explore this connection. The model produces xylem networks and uses different parameterizations of intervessel connection vulnerability to embolism spread: the Young-Laplace equation and pit membrane stretching. Its purpose is upscaling processes occurring on the microscopic length scales, such as embolism propagation through pit membranes, to obtain tissue-scale hydraulics. The terminal branch VC of Acer glabrum was successfully reproduced relying only on real observations of xylem tissue anatomy. A sensitivity analysis shows that hydraulic performance and VC shape and location along the water tension axis are heavily dependent on anatomy. The main result is that the linkage between pit-scale and vessel-scale anatomical characters, along with xylem network topology, affects VCs significantly. This work underscores the importance of stepping up research related to the three-dimensional network structure of xylem tissues. The proposed model's versatility makes it an important tool to explore similar future questions.

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