keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20158616/moving-water-well-comparing-hydraulic-efficiency-in-twigs-and-trunks-of-coniferous-ring-porous-and-diffuse-porous-saplings-from-temperate-and-tropical-forests
#21
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Katherine McCulloh, John S Sperry, Barbara Lachenbruch, Frederick C Meinzer, Peter B Reich, Steven Voelker
*Coniferous, diffuse-porous and ring-porous trees vary in their xylem anatomy, but the functional consequences of these differences are not well understood from the scale of the conduit to the individual. *Hydraulic and anatomical measurements were made on branches and trunks from 16 species from temperate and tropical areas, representing all three wood types. Scaling of stem conductivity (K(h)) with stem diameter was used to model the hydraulic conductance of the stem network. *Ring-porous trees showed the steepest increase in K(h) with stem size...
April 2010: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19674329/murray-s-law-the-yarrum-optimum-and-the-hydraulic-architecture-of-compound-leaves
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine A McCulloh, John S Sperry, Frederick C Meinzer, Barbara Lachenbruch, Cristian Atala
There are two optima for maximizing hydraulic conductance per vasculature volume in plants. Murray's law (ML) predicts the optimal conduit taper for a fixed change in conduit number across branch ranks. The opposite, the Yarrum optimum (YO), predicts the optimal change in conduit number for a fixed taper. We derived the solution for YO and then evaluated compliance with both optima within the xylem of compound leaves, where conduits should have a minimal mechanical role. We sampled leaves from temperate ferns, and tropical and temperate angiosperms Leaf vasculature exhibited greater agreement with ML than YO...
2009: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18440559/a-hydraulic-photosynthetic-model-based-on-extended-hlh-and-its-application-to-coast-redwood-sequoia-sempervirens
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ning Du, Jintu Fan, Shuo Chen, Yang Liu
Although recent investigations [Ryan, M.G., Yoder, B.J., 1997. Hydraulic limits to tree height and tree growth. Bioscience 47, 235-242; Koch, G.W., Sillett, S.C.,Jennings, G.M.,Davis, S.D., 2004. The limits to tree height. Nature 428, 851-854; Niklas, K.J., Spatz, H., 2004. Growth and hydraulic (not mechanical) constraints govern the scaling of tree height and mass. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. 101, 15661-15663; Ryan, M.G., Phillips, N., Bond, B.J., 2006. Hydraulic limitation hypothesis revisited. Plant Cell Environ...
July 21, 2008: Journal of Theoretical Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18088335/safety-and-efficiency-conflicts-in-hydraulic-architecture-scaling-from-tissues-to-trees
#24
REVIEW
John S Sperry, Frederick C Meinzer, Katherine A McCulloh
Tree hydraulic architecture exhibits patterns that propagate from tissue to tree scales. A challenge is to make sense of these patterns in terms of trade-offs and adaptations. The universal trend for conduits per area to decrease with increasing conduit diameter below the theoretical packing limit may reflect the compromise between maximizing the area for conduction versus mechanical support and storage. Variation in conduit diameter may have two complementary influences: one being compromises between efficiency and safety and the other being that conduit tapering within a tree maximizes conductance per growth investment...
May 2008: Plant, Cell & Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18069964/tapering-of-xylem-conduits-and-hydraulic-limitations-in-sycamore-acer-pseudoplatanus-trees
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giai Petit, Tommaso Anfodillo, Maurizio Mencuccini
Vertical conduit tapering is proposed as an effective mechanism to almost eliminate the increase in hydraulic resistance with increased height. Despite this potential role, very little is known about its changes during ontogeny. Here, conduit tapering and stem morphology of young/small and old/tall individuals of Acer pseudoplatanus in the field, as well as 3-yr-old grafted trees from both age classes, were analysed. The distribution of hydraulic resistance along stems was also determined in a subsample of trees...
2008: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17850336/sanio-s-laws-revisited-size-dependent-changes-in-the-xylem-architecture-of-trees
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maurizio Mencuccini, Teemu Hölttä, Giai Petit, Federico Magnani
Early observations led Sanio [Wissen. Bot., 8, (1872) 401] to state that xylem conduit diameters and lengths in a coniferous tree increase from the apex down to a height below which they begin to decrease towards the tree base. Sanio's law of vertical tapering has been repeatedly tested with contradictory results and the debate over the scaling of conduit diameters with distance from the apex has not been settled. The debate has recently acquired new vigour, as an accurate knowledge of the vertical changes in wood anatomy has been shown to be crucial to scaling metabolic properties to plant and ecosystem levels...
November 2007: Ecology Letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17443973/scaling-of-tree-vascular-transport-systems-along-gradients-of-nutrient-supply-and-altitude
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David A Coomes, Kerry L Jenkins, Lydia E S Cole
A recent metabolic scaling theory predicts that plants minimize resistance to hydraulic conduction in the bulk transport network by narrowing the diameter of xylem conduits distally. We hypothesized that trees growing at high altitude or on nutrient-depleted soils would prioritize survival over minimizing hydraulic resistance, and that their vascular systems would be structured differently from those of trees growing under more benign conditions. In fact, conduits were observed to narrow towards the periphery of vascular system within all 45 trees of three species we investigated, and scaling relationships were indistinguishable across a range of environments...
February 22, 2007: Biology Letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16411931/convergent-tapering-of-xylem-conduits-in-different-woody-species
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tommaso Anfodillo, Vinicio Carraro, Marco Carrer, Claudio Fior, Sergio Rossi
A recent theoretical model (the West, Brown and Enquist, WBE model) hypothesized that plants have evolved a network of xylem conduits with a tapered structure (narrower conduits distally) which should minimize the cost of water transport from roots to leaves. Specific measurements are required to test the model predictions. We sampled both angiosperms and gymnosperms (50 trees) growing in different environments with heights ranging from 0.5 to 44.4 m, measuring variations of the xylem-conduit diameter from tree top to stem base...
2006: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15631974/patterns-in-hydraulic-architecture-and-their-implications-for-transport-efficiency
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine A McCulloh, John S Sperry
We evaluated whether patterns in hydraulic architecture increase transport efficiency. Five patterns are identified: area-preserving branching; variable trunk versus twig sap velocity; distally decreasing leaf specific conductivity (K(L)) and conduit diameter; and a decline in leaf specific conductance (k(L)) of the entire plant with maturation. These patterns coexist in innumerable combinations depending on the ratio of distal/proximal conduit number (F). The model of West and colleagues does not account for this diversity, in part by specifying F = 1 and requiring a specific conduit taper derived from the incorrect premise that k(L) is constant with plant size...
March 2005: Tree Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15164228/modelling-the-isotope-enrichment-of-leaf-water
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
B Barnes, G Farquhar, K Gan
Farquhar and Gan have proposed a model for the spatial variation in the isotopic enrichment of H(2)(18)O across a leaf, which is specifically formulated for monocotyledoneous leaves. The model is based on the interaction between mass fluxes longitudinally within the xylem, and fluxes laterally through veinlets into the lamina mesophyll, where moisture leaves the leaf through transpiration. The lighter, more abundant, molecule H(2)(16)O escapes preferentially with the evaporating water, resulting in the enrichment of H(2)(18)O at these sites...
June 2004: Journal of Mathematical Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12607000/water-transport-in-plants-obeys-murray-s-law
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine A McCulloh, John S Sperry, Frederick R Adler
The optimal water transport system in plants should maximize hydraulic conductance (which is proportional to photosynthesis) for a given investment in transport tissue. To investigate how this optimum may be achieved, we have performed computer simulations of the hydraulic conductance of a branched transport system. Here we show that the optimum network is not achieved by the commonly assumed pipe model of plant form, or its antecedent, da Vinci's rule. In these representations, the number and area of xylem conduits is constant at every branch rank...
February 27, 2003: Nature
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