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First published online March 6, 2003; 10.1104/pp.102.012856

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Plant Physiol, April 2003, Vol. 131, pp. 1775-1780

Vulnerability of Xylem Vessels to Cavitation in Sugar Maple. Scaling from Individual Vessels to Whole Branches1

Peter J. Melcher,* Maciej A. Zwieniecki, and N. Michele Holbrook

Ithaca College, Biology Department, Center for Natural Sciences, Ithaca, New York 14850 (P.J.M.); and Harvard University, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Biological Laboratories, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02318 (M.A.Z., N.M.H.)

The relation between xylem vessel age and vulnerability to cavitation of sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) was quantified by measuring the pressure required to force air across bordered pit membranes separating individual xylem vessels. We found that the bordered pit membranes of vessels located in current year xylem could withstand greater applied gas pressures (3.8 MPa) compared with bordered pit membranes in vessels located in older annular rings (2.0 MPa). A longitudinal transect along 6-year-old branches indicated that the pressure required to push gas across bordered pit membranes of current year xylem did not vary with distance from the growing tip. To understand the contribution of age-related changes in vulnerability to the overall resistance to cavitation, we combined data on the pressure thresholds of individual xylem vessels with measurements of the relative flow rate through each annual ring. The annual ring of the current year contributed only 16% of the total flow measured on 10-cm-long segments cut from 6-year-old branches, but it contributed more than 70% of the total flow when measured through 6-year-old branches to the point of leaf attachment. The vulnerability curve calculated using relative flow rates measured on branch segments were similar to vulnerability curves measured on 6-year-old branches (pressure that reduces hydraulic conductance by 50% = 1.6-2.4 MPa), whereas the vulnerability curve calculated using relative flow rates measured on 6-year-old branches were similar to ones measured on the extension growth of the current year (pressure that reduces hydraulic conductance by 50% = 3.8 MPa). These data suggest that, in sugar maple, the xylem of the current year can withstand larger xylem tensions than older wood and dominates water delivery to leaves.


1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. IBN-0078155), by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (grant no. 98-35100-6081), and by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

* Corresponding author; e-mail pmelcher{at}ithaca.edu; fax 607-274-1131.

© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists



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