» Articles » PMID: 28547101

Stem Water Transport and Freeze-thaw Xylem Embolism in Conifers and Angiosperms in a Tasmanian Treeline Heath

Overview
Journal Oecologia
Date 2017 May 27
PMID 28547101
Citations 22
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The effect of freezing on stem xylem hydraulic conductivity and leaf chlorophyll a fluorescence was measured in 12 tree and shrub species from a treeline heath in Tasmania, Australia. Reduction in stem hydraulic conductivity after a single freeze-thaw cycle was minimal in conifers and the vessel-less angiosperm species Tasmannia lanceolata (Winteraceae), whereas mean loss of conductivity in vessel-forming angiosperms fell in the range 17-83%. A positive linear relationship was observed between percentage loss of hydraulic conductivity by freeze-thaw and the average conduit diameter across all 12 species. This supports the hypothesis that large-diameter vascular conduits have a greater likelihood of freeze-thaw cavitation because larger bubbles are produced, which are more likely to expand under tension. Leaf frost tolerances, as measured by a 50% loss of maximum PSII quantum yield, varied from -6 to -13°C, indicating that these species were more frost-sensitive than plants from northern hemisphere temperate forest and treeline communities. There was no evidence of a relationship between frost tolerance of leaves and the resilience of stem water transport to freezing, suggesting that low temperature survival and the resistance of stem water transport to freezing are independently evolving traits. The results of this study bear on the ecological importance of stem freezing in the southern hemisphere treeline zones.

Citing Articles

Spatial and Temporal Freezing Dynamics of Leaves Revealed by Time-Lapse Imaging.

Kane C, McAdam S Plant Cell Environ. 2024; 48(1):164-175.

PMID: 39253967 PMC: 11615429. DOI: 10.1111/pce.15118.


At least it is a dry cold: the global distribution of freeze-thaw and drought stress and the traits that may impart poly-tolerance in conifers.

McCulloh K, Augustine S, Goke A, Jordan R, Krieg C, OKeefe K Tree Physiol. 2022; 43(1):1-15.

PMID: 36094836 PMC: 9833871. DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpac102.


Impact of freeze-thaw-induced pit aspiration on stem water transport in the subalpine conifer Abies veitchii.

Taneda H, Ogasa M, Yazaki K, Funayama-Noguchi S, Miyazawa Y, Mayr S Plant Physiol. 2022; 190(3):1687-1698.

PMID: 35997583 PMC: 9614463. DOI: 10.1093/plphys/kiac388.


Conduit position and connectivity affect the likelihood of xylem embolism during natural drought in evergreen woodland species.

Pritzkow C, Brown M, Carins-Murphy M, Bourbia I, Mitchell P, Brodersen C Ann Bot. 2022; 130(3):431-444.

PMID: 35420657 PMC: 9486930. DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcac053.


Contrasting Hydraulic Efficiency and Photosynthesis Strategy in Differential Successional Stages of a Subtropical Forest in a Karst Region.

Wu G, Chen D, Zhou Z Plants (Basel). 2021; 10(12).

PMID: 34961075 PMC: 8705339. DOI: 10.3390/plants10122604.