New insights into wood anatomy and function relationships: How Eucalyptus challenges what we already know

•High xylem efficiency was linked to high xylem safety in four Eucalyptus species.•Large xylem vessels had smaller intervessels pits than small xylem vessels.•Xylem vulnerability to cavitation was correlated with branch and stem wood density.•The relationships between wood anatomy and hydraulic func...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2019-12, Vol.454, p.117638, Article 117638
Hauptverfasser: Fernández, M.E., Barotto, A.J., Martínez Meier, A., Gyenge, J.E., Tesón, N., Quiñones Martorello, A.S., Merlo, E., Dalla Salda, G., Rozenberg, P., Monteoliva, S.
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container_end_page
container_issue
container_start_page 117638
container_title Forest ecology and management
container_volume 454
creator Fernández, M.E.
Barotto, A.J.
Martínez Meier, A.
Gyenge, J.E.
Tesón, N.
Quiñones Martorello, A.S.
Merlo, E.
Dalla Salda, G.
Rozenberg, P.
Monteoliva, S.
description •High xylem efficiency was linked to high xylem safety in four Eucalyptus species.•Large xylem vessels had smaller intervessels pits than small xylem vessels.•Xylem vulnerability to cavitation was correlated with branch and stem wood density.•The relationships between wood anatomy and hydraulic function were similar at inter- and intraspecific levels. Multispecies surveys have shown that there is a weak but significant trade-off between xylem efficiency and safety in woody species, with no species maximizing both attributes at the same time. Relationships between xylem structure and function are studied mostly at the interspecific level, with few studies considering the relationships at the intraspecific level, particularly in angiosperms. Studies have shown that relationships between xylem anatomy or wood density and vulnerability to cavitation (which determines xylem safety) observed in multi-species surveys may be different to those observed within a species. This raises the question about the value of multispecies studies to shed light over what is adaptive within a given species, the organization level at which natural and human selection operates. To contribute to this debate, we studied xylem structure and function in four Eucalyptus species, and made focus within one of them, E. globulus, to determine if patterns observed at the interspecific level are also held within a species. Eucalyptus species have a xylem composed by solitary vessels surrounded and connected to imperforate tracheary cells and parenchyma, a particular anatomy poorly known in terms of its function. Correlation analyses revealed that the trends observed between vessel size (mean and distribution) and vulnerability to cavitation are similar at the interspecific and intraspecific levels. Moreover, no trade-off has been observed between xylem efficiency (maximum hydraulic conductivity) and safety (water potential at 12% and 50% of hydraulic conductivity loss), but the opposite trend: individuals with mean larger vessels presented lower vulnerability to cavitation. Cells around vessels (parenchyma, vasicentric tracheids, fibertracheids) could be involved in this phenomenon since they correlate both with maximum hydraulic conductivity (positively) and vulnerability to cavitation (negatively) at the interspecific level. In addition, large xylem vessels presented smaller pits than small xylem vessels. This suggests that pit size is involved in the lack of trade-off between xylem safety
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117638
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Multispecies surveys have shown that there is a weak but significant trade-off between xylem efficiency and safety in woody species, with no species maximizing both attributes at the same time. Relationships between xylem structure and function are studied mostly at the interspecific level, with few studies considering the relationships at the intraspecific level, particularly in angiosperms. Studies have shown that relationships between xylem anatomy or wood density and vulnerability to cavitation (which determines xylem safety) observed in multi-species surveys may be different to those observed within a species. This raises the question about the value of multispecies studies to shed light over what is adaptive within a given species, the organization level at which natural and human selection operates. To contribute to this debate, we studied xylem structure and function in four Eucalyptus species, and made focus within one of them, E. globulus, to determine if patterns observed at the interspecific level are also held within a species. Eucalyptus species have a xylem composed by solitary vessels surrounded and connected to imperforate tracheary cells and parenchyma, a particular anatomy poorly known in terms of its function. Correlation analyses revealed that the trends observed between vessel size (mean and distribution) and vulnerability to cavitation are similar at the interspecific and intraspecific levels. Moreover, no trade-off has been observed between xylem efficiency (maximum hydraulic conductivity) and safety (water potential at 12% and 50% of hydraulic conductivity loss), but the opposite trend: individuals with mean larger vessels presented lower vulnerability to cavitation. Cells around vessels (parenchyma, vasicentric tracheids, fibertracheids) could be involved in this phenomenon since they correlate both with maximum hydraulic conductivity (positively) and vulnerability to cavitation (negatively) at the interspecific level. In addition, large xylem vessels presented smaller pits than small xylem vessels. This suggests that pit size is involved in the lack of trade-off between xylem safety and efficiency. Finally, vulnerability to cavitation was correlated with branch and stem wood density of the same tree, but correlations had opposite sign depending on the plant organ. 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Multispecies surveys have shown that there is a weak but significant trade-off between xylem efficiency and safety in woody species, with no species maximizing both attributes at the same time. Relationships between xylem structure and function are studied mostly at the interspecific level, with few studies considering the relationships at the intraspecific level, particularly in angiosperms. Studies have shown that relationships between xylem anatomy or wood density and vulnerability to cavitation (which determines xylem safety) observed in multi-species surveys may be different to those observed within a species. This raises the question about the value of multispecies studies to shed light over what is adaptive within a given species, the organization level at which natural and human selection operates. 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Cells around vessels (parenchyma, vasicentric tracheids, fibertracheids) could be involved in this phenomenon since they correlate both with maximum hydraulic conductivity (positively) and vulnerability to cavitation (negatively) at the interspecific level. In addition, large xylem vessels presented smaller pits than small xylem vessels. This suggests that pit size is involved in the lack of trade-off between xylem safety and efficiency. Finally, vulnerability to cavitation was correlated with branch and stem wood density of the same tree, but correlations had opposite sign depending on the plant organ. 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Multispecies surveys have shown that there is a weak but significant trade-off between xylem efficiency and safety in woody species, with no species maximizing both attributes at the same time. Relationships between xylem structure and function are studied mostly at the interspecific level, with few studies considering the relationships at the intraspecific level, particularly in angiosperms. Studies have shown that relationships between xylem anatomy or wood density and vulnerability to cavitation (which determines xylem safety) observed in multi-species surveys may be different to those observed within a species. This raises the question about the value of multispecies studies to shed light over what is adaptive within a given species, the organization level at which natural and human selection operates. 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identifier ISSN: 0378-1127
ispartof Forest ecology and management, 2019-12, Vol.454, p.117638, Article 117638
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1872-7042
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Drought resistance
Life Sciences
Pits size
Solitary vessels
Vegetal Biology
Vulnerability to cavitation
Wood density
Xylem efficiency
Xylem safety
title New insights into wood anatomy and function relationships: How Eucalyptus challenges what we already know
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