Unsaturation in the air spaces of leaves and its implications

Author:

Cernusak Lucas A.1ORCID,Wong Suan Chin2,Stuart‐Williams Hilary2,Márquez Diego A.3ORCID,Pontarin Nicole2,Farquhar Graham D.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Science and Engineering James Cook University Cairns Queensland Australia

2. Research School of Biology Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

3. School of Biosciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

Abstract

AbstractModern plant physiological theory stipulates that the resistance to water movement from plants to the atmosphere is overwhelmingly dominated by stomata. This conception necessitates a corollary assumption—that the air spaces in leaves must be nearly saturated with water vapour; that is, with a relative humidity that does not decline materially below unity. As this idea became progressively engrained in scientific discourse and textbooks over the last century, observations inconsistent with this corollary assumption were occasionally reported. Yet, evidence of unsaturation gained little traction, with acceptance of the prevailing framework motivated by three considerations: (1) leaf water potentials measured by either thermocouple psychrometry or the Scholander pressure chamber are largely consistent with the framework; (2) being able to assume near saturation of intercellular air spaces was transformational to leaf gas exchange analysis; and (3) there has been no obvious mechanism to explain a variable, liquid‐phase resistance in the leaf mesophyll. Here, we review the evidence that refutes the assumption of universal, near saturation of air spaces in leaves. Refining the prevailing paradigm with respect to this assumption provides opportunities for identifying and developing mechanisms for increased plant productivity in the face of increasing evaporative demand imposed by global climate change.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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