Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Global change and plant water relations
- 2 Cavitation. A review: past, present and future
- 3 Effect of cavitation on the status of water in plants
- 4 Stomatal control of xylem cavitation
- 5 Refilling of embolized xylem
- 6 Interpretation of the dynamics of plant water potential
- 7 A proposed mechanism of freezing and thawing in conifer xylem
- 8 Winter xylem embolism and spring recovery in Betula cordifolia, Fagus grandifolia, Abies balsamea and Picea rubens
- 9 Drought resistance strategies and vulnerability to cavitation of some Mediterranean sclerophyllous trees
- 10 Relations between sap velocity and cavitation in broad-leaved trees
- 11 NMR and water transport in plants
- 12 The symplast radial-axial water transport in plants: a NMR approach
- 13 Reproductive adaptation by polyembryony of coniferous forest trees under climatic stress as revealed by the metabolism of tritiated water
- 14 A heat balance method for measuring sap flow in small trees
- 15 Heat pulse measurements on beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in relation to weather conditions
- 16 Extremely fast changes of xylem water flow rate in tall trees caused by atmospheric, soil and mechanic factors
- 17 Water relations and water transport in coppice vs. single stem Quercus cerris L. trees
- 18 Environmental control of water flux through Maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait).
- 19 Evaluation of transpiration of apple trees and measurement of daily course of water flow within the main branches of walnut trees
- 20 Estimating citrus orchard canopy resistance from measurements of actual and potential transpiration
- 21 Stomatal conductance in tomato responds to air humidity
- 22 Water relations of Canarian laurel forest trees
- 23 Watering regime and photosynthetic performance of Gunnera tinctoria (Molina) Mirbel.
- 24 Water relations and ultrasound emissions in Douglas-fir seedlings infected with xylem pathogens
- 25 Diurnal fruit shrinkage: a model
- 26 Analysis of pressure-volume curves by non-linear regression
- 27 Determination of the amount of apoplastic water and other water relations parameters in conifer needles
- 28 The assessment of water status in chilled plants
- 29 An artificial osmotic cell: a model system for studying phenomena of negative pressure and for determining concentrations of solutes
- 30 Measurement of water and solute uptake into excised roots at positive and negative root pressures
- Index
5 - Refilling of embolized xylem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Global change and plant water relations
- 2 Cavitation. A review: past, present and future
- 3 Effect of cavitation on the status of water in plants
- 4 Stomatal control of xylem cavitation
- 5 Refilling of embolized xylem
- 6 Interpretation of the dynamics of plant water potential
- 7 A proposed mechanism of freezing and thawing in conifer xylem
- 8 Winter xylem embolism and spring recovery in Betula cordifolia, Fagus grandifolia, Abies balsamea and Picea rubens
- 9 Drought resistance strategies and vulnerability to cavitation of some Mediterranean sclerophyllous trees
- 10 Relations between sap velocity and cavitation in broad-leaved trees
- 11 NMR and water transport in plants
- 12 The symplast radial-axial water transport in plants: a NMR approach
- 13 Reproductive adaptation by polyembryony of coniferous forest trees under climatic stress as revealed by the metabolism of tritiated water
- 14 A heat balance method for measuring sap flow in small trees
- 15 Heat pulse measurements on beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in relation to weather conditions
- 16 Extremely fast changes of xylem water flow rate in tall trees caused by atmospheric, soil and mechanic factors
- 17 Water relations and water transport in coppice vs. single stem Quercus cerris L. trees
- 18 Environmental control of water flux through Maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait).
- 19 Evaluation of transpiration of apple trees and measurement of daily course of water flow within the main branches of walnut trees
- 20 Estimating citrus orchard canopy resistance from measurements of actual and potential transpiration
- 21 Stomatal conductance in tomato responds to air humidity
- 22 Water relations of Canarian laurel forest trees
- 23 Watering regime and photosynthetic performance of Gunnera tinctoria (Molina) Mirbel.
- 24 Water relations and ultrasound emissions in Douglas-fir seedlings infected with xylem pathogens
- 25 Diurnal fruit shrinkage: a model
- 26 Analysis of pressure-volume curves by non-linear regression
- 27 Determination of the amount of apoplastic water and other water relations parameters in conifer needles
- 28 The assessment of water status in chilled plants
- 29 An artificial osmotic cell: a model system for studying phenomena of negative pressure and for determining concentrations of solutes
- 30 Measurement of water and solute uptake into excised roots at positive and negative root pressures
- Index
Summary
SUMMARY
The water content of xylem has often been shown to undergo seasonal and even diurnal fluctuations, apparently in response to changes in trans pi rational flux. When the water content declines, it may be the result of cavitation in water in tracheids or simply indicative of water menisci receding into the tapered ends of already-cavitated tracheids. Similarly, an increase in water content may be caused by movement of menisci and/or complete refilling of tracheids. Recent experiments suggest that parenchyma has no role in the refilling process. Rather, refilling is brought about by the dissolving of trapped gas in the tracheids as the menisci adjust their position in response to the water potential.
INTRODUCTION
It has long been known that the water content of the woody tissues of trees undergo seasonal fluctuations, but the fact was overlooked in most discussion of the theory of water transport and little attention was given to the underlying processes. Some of the most convincing early data illustrating the phenomenon were provided by Gibbs, working on Canadian forest trees in the 1930s (Gibbs, 1958). He showed that the wood of young trees of Betula populiferaunderwent an annual cycle of water content, varying from 100 per cent of dry weight in the early spring to as little as 60 per cent in the late summer (Fig. 1). Fluctuations were most extreme, and earlier in the season, in the upper part of the stem; and the rise in the spring was immediately after the thawing of the soil.
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- Water Transport in Plants under Climatic Stress , pp. 52 - 62Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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