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Persistent decay of fresh xylem hydraulic conductivity varies with pressure gradient and marks plant responses to injury
Author(s) -
Bonetti Sara,
Breitenstein Daniel,
Fatichi Simone,
Domec JeanChristophe,
Or Dani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/pce.13893
Subject(s) - xylem , hydraulic conductivity , tracheid , water transport , pressure gradient , transpiration stream , botany , soil science , chemistry , transpiration , mechanics , water flow , environmental science , biology , soil water , physics , photosynthesis
Defining plant hydraulic traits is central to the quantification of ecohydrological processes ranging from land‐atmosphere interactions, to tree mortality and water‐carbon budgets. A key plant trait is the xylem specific hydraulic conductivity ( K x ), that describes the plant's vascular system capacity to transport water. While xylem's vessels and tracheids are dead upon maturity, the xylem is neither inert nor deadwood, various components of the sapwood and surrounding tissue remaining alive and functional. Moreover, the established definition of K x assumes linear relations between water flux and pressure gradient by tacitly considering the xylem as a “passive conduit”. Here, we re‐examine this notion of an inert xylem by systematically characterizing xylem flow in several woody plants using K x measurements under constant and cyclic pressure gradients. Results show a temporal and pressure gradient dependence of K x . Additionally, microscopic features in “living branches” are irreversibly modified upon drying of the xylem, thus differentiating the macroscopic definition of K x for living and dead xylem. The findings highlight the picture of the xylem as a complex and delicate conductive system whose hydraulic behaviour transcends a passive gradient‐based flow. The study sheds new light on xylem conceptualization, conductivity measurement protocols, in situ long‐distance water transport and ecosystem modelling.