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Plant Physiology 76:31-35 (1984)
© 1984 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Metabolic Response of River Birch and European Birch and European Birch Roots to Hypoxia 1

Robert R. Tripepi2 and Cary A. Mitchell

Department of Horticulture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Flood tolerance of woody plants has been attributed to internal oxygen diffusion from shoot to root, metabolic adaptation within the root, or both. The purpose of this study was to compare several biochemical and physiological responses of birch roots to hypoxia in order to determine the nature of root metabolic adaptation to low oxygen tension. One-year-old seedlings of flood-tolerant river birch (Betula nigra L.) and flood-intolerant European birch (Betula pendula Roth) were transferred to solution culture, and the solutions were bubbled with air or nitrogen. After 18 days of hypoxia, total adenosine phosphate and ATP contents of river birch roots were 35% and 23% of controls, respectively, whereas those of European birch roots were 13% and 8%. Adenylate energy charge of river birch roots decreased between 6 and 12 days of hypoxia. In contrast, energy charge of European birch roots decreased after only 1 day of hypoxia. In vitro activity of cytochrome c oxidase and oxygen consumption capacity of excised roots from both birch species decreased under hypoxia. In vitro activity of alcohol dehydrogenase from roots of both species increased after 1 day of hypoxia. However, alcohol dehydrogenase activity from river birch roots increased 25-fold after 6 days of hypoxia, whereas that from European birch decreased back to control levels. Hypoxia decreased malate content of roots from both species. Metabolic adaptation within the root, rather than internal oxygen diffusion, appears to be responsible for the relative tolerance of river birch to hypoxia.


2 Present address: Department of Plant, Soil, and Entomological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83843.

1 Supported in part by a grant to R. R. T. from the International Society of Arborists. Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station Journal paper number 9755. Project conducted by the senior author in partial fulfillment of the Ph.D. degree.







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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society of Plant Biologists