Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 61:1000-1005 (1978)
© 1978 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

On the Resistance to Transpiration of the Sites of Evaporation within the Leaf 1

Graham D. Farquhar2 and Klaus Raschke

MSU-ERDA Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824

The rates of transpiration from the upper and lower surfaces of leaves of Gossypium hirsutum, Xanthium strumarium, and Zea mays were compared with the rates at which helium diffused across those leaves. There was no evidence for effects of CO2 concentration or rate of evaporation on the resistance to water loss from the evaporating surface ("resistance of the mesophyll wall to transpiration") and no evidence for any significant wall resistance in turgid tissues. The possible existence of a wall resistance was also tested in leaves of Commelina communis and Tulipa gesneriana whose epidermis could be easily peeled. Only when an epidermis was removed from a leaf, evaporation from the mesophyll tissue declined. We conclude that under conditions relevant to studies of stomatal behavior, the water vapor pressure at the sites of evaporation is equal to the saturation vapor pressure.


2 Present address: Research School of Biological Sciences, P.O. Box 475, Canberra City, A.C.T. 2601, Australia.

1 Research supported by the United States Energy Research and Development Administration under Contract EY-76-C-02-1338.




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