树木外体水势低-活细胞脱水胁迫和木质部栓塞

L. Lindfors
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摘要

低体外水势可以通过降低木质部由于栓塞的水力传导性和引起活细胞脱水胁迫而影响树木。在夏季和冬季,树木经常出现低的外体水势。这可能是由于蒸腾作用造成的水分流失,也可能是由于冰的化学性质造成的冻结。本文通过干燥、冷冻和调节木质部汁液渗透浓度三种不同的方法引起低水势对树木的影响,并通过茎粗变化、叶片气体交换、树木温度和木质部水势测量了树木对低水势的响应。活薄壁细胞被认为对木质部直径变化的影响可以忽略不计,但本文表明薄壁细胞的作用实际上可能更为重要。薄壁细胞在冻结木质部直径变化中起主要作用的证据也支持细胞外冻结理论。此外,叶肉细胞对冰冻的反应是光合作用的迅速抑制。还研究了低水势导致木质部导管压力增加如何影响栓塞形成和冰传播过程中树木的水关系。在冰冻过程中,从树干中检测到气体爆裂。木质部导管中气体量的减少有利于树木避免冬季栓塞。实验还证实,由于所谓的“电容效应”,树木中栓塞的形成甚至可以暂时帮助缓解水分压力。低的外胞水势影响树木的木质部和活细胞,这些反应的相互联系也在本文中得到了展示。
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Low apoplastic water potential in trees - dehydration stress on living cells and embolism in xylem
Low apoplastic water potentials can affect trees by decreasing the hydraulic conductivity of xylem due to embolism and by causing dehydration stress in living cells. Low apoplastic water potentials regularly occur in trees during summer and winter. These can either be caused by loss of water due to transpiration or by freezing due to the chemical properties of ice. In this thesis the effects of low apoplastic water potential on trees were studied by causing low water potentials with three different methods: desiccation, freezing and by adjusting the osmotic concentration of xylem sap. Tree responses in this thesis were measured with stem diameter changes, leaf gas exchange, tree temperature and xylem water potential. Living parenchyma cells are thought to have negligible effect on xylem diameter changes but this thesis shows that the role of parenchyma can, in fact, be much more significant. Evidence for the major role of parenchyma cells in the diameter changes of frozen xylem also supported the theory of extracellular freezing. Furthermore, mesophyll cells were shown to react to freezing with a rapid depression of photosynthesis. It was also studied how a pressure increase in the xylem conduits, resulting from low water potentials, affects tree water relations during embolism formation and ice propagation. A gas burst was detected emerging from the tree stem during freezing. A decrease in the amount of gases in the xylem conduit can benefit trees in avoiding winter embolism. It was also experimentally confirmed that the formation of embolism in trees can temporarily even help relieve water stress due to the so called ́capacitive effect ́. Low apoplastic water potential affects both the xylem and living cells in trees, and the interconnectedness of these responses are also shown in this thesis.
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