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Mechanisms of xylem hydraulic recovery after drought in Eucalyptus saligna.

Alice GautheyJennifer M R PetersRosana LópezMadeline R Carins-MurphyCelia M Rodriguez-DominguezDavid T TissueBelinda E MedlynTim J BrodribbBrendan Choat
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2022)
The mechanisms by which woody plants recover xylem hydraulic capacity after drought stress are not well understood, particularly with regard to the role of embolism refilling. We evaluated the recovery of xylem hydraulic capacity in young Eucalyptus saligna plants exposed to cycles of drought stress and rewatering. Plants were exposed to moderate and severe drought stress treatments, with recovery monitored at time intervals from 24 h to 6 months after rewatering. The percentage loss of xylem vessels due to embolism (PLV) was quantified at each time point using microcomputed tomography with stem water potential (Ψ x ) and canopy transpiration (E c ) measured before scans. Plants exposed to severe drought stress suffered high levels of embolism (47.38% ± 10.97% PLV) and almost complete canopy loss. No evidence of embolism refilling was observed at 24 h, 1 week, or 3 weeks after rewatering despite rapid recovery in Ψ x . Recovery of hydraulic capacity was achieved over a 6-month period by growth of new xylem tissue, with canopy leaf area and E c recovering over the same period. These findings indicate that E. saligna recovers slowly from severe drought stress, with potential for embolism to persist in the xylem for many months after rainfall events.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • early onset
  • computed tomography
  • drug induced
  • human health
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  • risk assessment
  • climate change