Efficiency and evolution of water transport systems in higher plants: a modelling approach. I. The earliest land plants

Author:

Abstract

The evolution of the stele was studied under the functional aspect of water transport problems by using a numerical approach. The underlying mathematical model describes the behaviour of a fluid-filled porous medium and is based on the coupling of Hooke’s law and Darcy’s law including a dynamic permeability approach which leads to a self-organization of the considered structure according to the resulting fluid- pressure field. Calculations dealing with two problems were performed. The essential demand of a water conducting system for a plant was demonstrated quantitatively. As soon as the plant shows an upright habit, the need for efficient water transport occurring through a highly porous apoplastic pathway becomes evident. In a second approach, the evolution of the protostele was simulated using the concept of dynamic permeability. The simulations of structures with self-regulating hydraulic conductivity yielded two strategies according to the pressure-permeability relationship. Increasing hydraulic conductivity with increasing negative fluid pressure results in peripheral layers of the conducting tissues, whereas the inverse pressure-permeability relationship yields a central position of the conducting tissues. The latter arrangement corresponds to the protostelar construction of early vascular plants.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference42 articles.

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5. Water Transport

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