Physiological changes during heartwood formation in young Eucalyptus bosistoana trees

Author:

Mishra Gayatri1,Collings David A.23,Altaner Clemens M.1

Affiliation:

1. 1 School of Forestry University of Canterbury Christchurch 8140 New Zealand

2. 2 School of Biological Sciences University of Canterbury Christchurch 8140 New Zealand

3. 3 School of Environmental & Life Sciences University of Newcastle Callaghan NSW 2308 Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Eucalyptus bosistoana F. Muell. is valued for its naturally durable heartwood. As part of an E. bosistoana breeding programme, we have tested the hypothesis that there is a prolonged transition from sapwood to heartwood in young trees, resulting in a wide transition zone. This needs to be considered when assessing trees for heartwood quantity and quality. Heartwood formation was investigated in radial profiles in cores from bark to bark of 6-year-old trees with conventional and confocal microscopy, and with a range of different staining techniques that visualised the physiological changes taking place in the parenchyma cells. Using immunolabelling with antibodies against histone proteins and α-tubulin, histochemical staining using potassium iodide (I3-KI) and fluorescence emission spectral scanning, we demonstrated that in heartwood nuclei, microtubules, reserve materials (starch) and vacuoles were absent. The observations revealed that 6-year-old E. bosistoana trees contained heartwood. The loss of water conductivity by tyloses formation and the death of the parenchyma cells occurred in close proximity resulting in a transition zone of ~1 cm.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Forestry,Plant Science

Reference42 articles.

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3. Heartwood, its function and formation;Wood Sci. Technol.,1976

4. Sapwood and heartwood: A review;Forestry Abstracts,1985

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