Plant Physiol, October 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 1008-1021
18O Spatial Patterns of Vein Xylem Water, Leaf Water,
and Dry Matter in Cotton Leaves
Kim Suan
Gan,
Suan Chin
Wong,
Jean Wan Hong
Yong,1 and
Graham Douglas
Farquhar*
Environmental Biology Group, Research School of Biological
Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital
Territory 2601, Australia
Three leaf water models (two-pool model, Péclet effect, and
string-of-lakes) were assessed for their robustness in predicting leaf
water enrichment and its spatial heterogeneity. This was achieved by
studying the 18O spatial patterns of vein xylem water, leaf
water, and dry matter in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum)
leaves grown at different humidities using new experimental approaches.
Vein xylem water was collected from intact transpiring cotton leaves by
pressurizing the roots in a pressure chamber, whereas the isotopic
content of leaf water was determined without extracting it from fresh
leaves with the aid of a purpose-designed leaf punch. Our results
indicate that veins have a significant degree of lateral exchange with
highly enriched leaf water. Vein xylem water is thus slightly, but
progressively enriched in the direction of water flow. Leaf water
enrichment is dependent on the relative distances from major veins,
with water from the marginal and intercostal regions more enriched and
that next to veins and near the leaf base more depleted than the
Craig-Gordon modeled enrichment of water at the sites of evaporation. The spatial pattern of leaf water enrichment varies with humidity, as
expected from the string-of-lakes model. This pattern is also reflected
in leaf dry matter. All three models are realistic, but none could
fully account for all of the facets of leaf water enrichment. Our
findings acknowledge the presence of capacitance in the ground tissues
of vein ribs and highlight the essential need to incorporate
Péclet effects into the string-of-lakes model when applying it to leaves.
1
Present address: Natural Sciences Academic
Group, National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological
University, Singapore.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail farquhar{at}rsbs.anu.edu.au; fax
61-2-6125-4919.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists