Water contents in healthy xylem, reaction zones (column boundary layers)
and decayed wood were determined in
sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) naturally infected by sooty bark
disease (Cryptostroma corticale (Ellis & Everh.)
Gregory & Waller) or wound-inoculated with Ustulina deusta (Fr.)
Petrak. or Ganoderma adspersum (Schulz)
Donk. Water contents determined gravimetrically were greater in reaction zones
than in healthy wood by factors
of 1·1–2·1 times. Maps of imageable proton density
(M0), essentially equivalent to relative water contents,
were also
calculated from two independent nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging
(MRI) data sets, acquired from T1
or T2-weighted experiments. M0 values
derived from these,
corrected for T2 and T1 respectively,
were in good
agreement, and paralleled the results obtained when total water was determined
gravimetrically, although the
proportional increase in M0 in reaction zones
(1·3–3·7 times) was greater than the corresponding
increase in total water.
Living wood saturated with water by vacuum infiltration contained
approx. 1·3 times more water, determined
gravimetrically, than uninfiltrated wood. The proportional increase in
M0 was greater (1·8–2·4 times). This was
attributable to the alleviation of magnetic susceptibility effects by
elimination of the gas–water interfaces normally
present in the uninfiltrated wood. The similarities between infiltrated wood
and reaction zone tissues in both total
gravimetric water content and NMR-visible water suggest that the biophysical
environment of the water might
be similar in both. This is compatible with the hypothesis that in reaction
zones the gases normally present in the
lumens of empty (dead) xylem fibres are replaced by an aqueous solution of
phytoalexin-like compounds. This has
been confirmed by microscopy. The implications of this in relation to
antimicrobial defence and xylem function are discussed.
Although contrast in NMR images of lesions was predominantly attributable
to changes in M0, a decrease in
the spin–spin relaxation time (T2) was seen in the
vicinity of some lesions.
Spin–lattice relaxation times (T1) were
not altered to the same extent.
Results obtained from both early and late stages of decay were much more
variable than those from healthy wood
or from reaction zones, and reflected both the low water content of decayed
wood (and hence poor signal-to-noise ratios for NMR data) and the changing
physical environment as the wood was degraded.