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Water relations of understorey shrubs in a Banksia woodland, Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia
Author(s) -
DODD J.,
BELL D. T.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1993.tb00457.x
Subject(s) - xylem , transpiration , banksia , shrub , understory , biology , botany , woodland , water table , ecology , canopy , groundwater , geology , photosynthesis , geotechnical engineering
Diurnal and seasonal water relations were measured in understorey species from a Banksia woodland. The shrubs exhibited various responses to summer drought. Stirlingia latifolia had high xylem pressure potential and transpiration in late summer. Adenanthos cygnorum maintained high xylem pressure potential year round with dawn values around − 0.3 MPa and minimum values around −1.3 MPa, but showed severe restriction of transpiration in late summer. Eremaea pauciflora and Jacksonia floribunda had high transpiration and xylem pressure potential levels in early summer, but exhibited water stress in late summer when transpiration rates were low and minimum xylem pressure potentials were as low as − 5.5 MPa. Late summer xylem pressure potentials in 27 other shrub species were, in general, inversely related to root system depth with minimum values below − 5.0 MPa in some species. The water relations of S. latifolia, E. pauciflora and J. floribunda indicated a phreatophytic habit: all possessed deep roots of sufficient size to reach groundwater that was located 6–7 m deep at the study site. Stirlingia latifolia functioned phreatophytically year round, while E. pauciflora and J. floribunda were phreatophytes until the falling water table carried ground‐water beyond the reach of their roots in late summer. However, most understorey species depended on soil‐stored water. Water use by the understorey was greatest in early summer.

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