Hydraulic traits are coupled with plant anatomical traits under drought–rewatering cycles in Ginkgo biloba L.

Author:

Li Shan123,Li Xin4,Wang Jie12,Chen Zhicheng5,Lu Sen3ORCID,Wan Xianchong5,Sun Hongyan67,Wang Li8,Delzon Sylvain9,Cochard Herve10,Jiang Xiaomei12,Shu Jianhua67,Zheng Jingming4,Yin Yafang12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wood Anatomy and Utilization, Research Institute of Wood Industry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, P.R. China

2. Wood Collections (WOODPEDIA), Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, P.R. China

3. Department of Environmental Science and Ecology, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Shaanxi University of Science and Technology, Xi’an 710021, P.R. China

4. College of Forestry, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, P.R. China

5. Key laboratory of Forest Ecology and Environment of National Forestry and Grassland Administration, Research Institute of Forest Ecology, Environment and Protection, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, P.R. China

6. Beijing Institute of Landscape Architecture, Beijing 100102, P.R. China

7. Beijing Key Lab of Greening Plants Breeding, Beijing Institute of Landscape Architecture, Beijing 100102, P.R. China

8. Center for Biological Imaging, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing 100101, P.R. China

9. INRAE, BIOGECO, University of Bordeaux, 33615 Pessac, France

10. INRAE, PIAF, Université Clermont Auvergne, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France

Abstract

Abstract Investigating the responses of plant anatomical traits of trees to drought–rewatering cycles helps us to understand their responses to climate change; however, such work has not been adequately reported. In this study, Ginkgo biloba L. saplings were subjected to moderate, severe, extreme and lethal drought conditions by withholding water according to the percentage loss of hydraulic conductivity (PLC) and rewatering on a regular basis. Samples of phloem, cambium and xylem were collected to quantify their cellular properties including cambium and phloem cell vitality, xylem growth ring width, pit aspiration rates and pit membrane thickness using light microscopy and transmission microscopy. The results showed that the mortality rate of G. biloba saplings reached 90% at approximately P88 (xylem water potential inducing 88% loss of hydraulic conductivity). The onset of cambium and phloem cell mortality might be in accordance with that of xylem embolism. Close negative correlations between xylem water potential and PLC and between xylem water potential and cambium and phloem mortality suggested that xylem hydraulic traits are coupled with anatomical traits under declining xylem water potential. Cambium and phloem cell vitality as well as xylem growth ring width decreased significantly with increasing drought conditions. However, xylem pit membrane thickness, cambial zone width and cambial cell geometry were not affected by the drought–rewatering cycles. The tracheid radial diameter, intertracheid cell wall thickness and tracheid density decreased significantly during both drought conditions and rewatering conditions. In addition to hydraulic traits, cambium and phloem cell vitality can be used as anatomical traits to evaluate the mortality of G. biloba under drought. Future work is proposed to observe the dynamics of pit aspiration rates under drought–rewatering cycles in situ to deepen our understanding of the essential role of bordered pits in the ‘air-seeding’ mechanism.

Funder

Beijing Natural Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Talent Project of Shaanxi University of Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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