Authors
Déborah Corso, Sylvain Delzon, Laurent J Lamarque, Hervé Cochard, José M Torres‐Ruiz, Andrew King, Timothy Brodribb
Publication date
2020/4
Journal
Plant, Cell & Environment
Volume
43
Issue
4
Pages
854-865
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Description
Identifying the drivers of stomatal closure and leaf damage during stress in grasses is a critical prerequisite for understanding crop resilience. Here, we investigated whether changes in stomatal conductance (gs) during dehydration were associated with changes in leaf hydraulic conductance (Kleaf), xylem cavitation, xylem collapse, and leaf cell turgor in wheat (Triticum aestivum). During soil dehydration, the decline of gs was concomitant with declining Kleaf under mild water stress. This early decline of leaf hydraulic conductance was not driven by cavitation, as the first cavitation events in leaf and stem were detected well after Kleaf had declined. Xylem vessel deformation could only account for <5% of the observed decline in leaf hydraulic conductance during dehydration. Thus, we concluded that changes in the hydraulic conductance of tissues outside the xylem were responsible for the majority of Kleaf decline …
Total citations
20202021202220232024313163616
Scholar articles