
The Widened Pipe Model of plant hydraulic evolution
Author(s) -
Loren Koçillari,
Mark E. Olson,
Samir Suweis,
Rodrigo P. Rocha,
Alberto Lovison,
Franco Cardin,
Todd E. Dawson,
Alberto Bergerandi Echeverría,
Alex Fajardo,
Silvia Lechthaler,
Cecilia MartínezPérez,
Carmen Regina Marcati,
KuoFang Chung,
Julieta A. Rosell,
Alí SegoviaRivas,
Cameron Williams,
Emilio PetroneMendoza,
Andrea Rinaldo,
Tommaso Anfodillo,
Jayanth R. Banavar,
Amos Maritan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.2100314118
Subject(s) - electrical conduit , xylem , hydraulic resistance , water transport , environmental science , hydraulic conductivity , resistance (ecology) , ecology , hydrology (agriculture) , biology , botany , geology , soil science , mechanics , engineering , water flow , geotechnical engineering , mechanical engineering , soil water , physics
Shaping global water and carbon cycles, plants lift water from roots to leaves through xylem conduits. The importance of xylem water conduction makes it crucial to understand how natural selection deploys conduit diameters within and across plants. Wider conduits transport more water but are likely more vulnerable to conduction-blocking gas embolisms and cost more for a plant to build, a tension necessarily shaping xylem conduit diameters along plant stems. We build on this expectation to present the Widened Pipe Model (WPM) of plant hydraulic evolution, testing it against a global dataset. The WPM predicts that xylem conduits should be narrowest at the stem tips, widening quickly before plateauing toward the stem base. This universal profile emerges from Pareto modeling of a trade-off between just two competing vectors of natural selection: one favoring rapid widening of conduits tip to base, minimizing hydraulic resistance, and another favoring slow widening of conduits, minimizing carbon cost and embolism risk. Our data spanning terrestrial plant orders, life forms, habitats, and sizes conform closely to WPM predictions. The WPM highlights carbon economy as a powerful vector of natural selection shaping plant function. It further implies that factors that cause resistance in plant conductive systems, such as conduit pit membrane resistance, should scale in exact harmony with tip-to-base conduit widening. Furthermore, the WPM implies that alterations in the environments of individual plants should lead to changes in plant height, for example, shedding terminal branches and resprouting at lower height under drier climates, thus achieving narrower and potentially more embolism-resistant conduits.