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Plant Physiology 99:972-978 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

Growth and Deposition of Inorganic Nutrient Elements in Developing Leaves of Zea mays L. 1

Avraham Meiri, Wendy Kuhn Silk and André Läuchli

Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California, Davis, California 95616, Institute of Soils and Water, The Volcani Center, Bet-Dagan 50250, Israel

Spatial distributions of growth and of the concentration of some inorganic nutrient elements were analyzed in developing leaves of maize (Zea mays L.). Growth was analyzed by pinprick experiments with numerical analysis to characterize fields of velocity and relative elemental elongation rate. Inductively coupled plasma and atomic emission spectroscopy were used to measure nutrients extracted from segments of leaf tissue collected by position. Leaves 7 and 8, both elongating 3 millimeters per hour had maximum relative elemental growth rates of 0.06 to 0.08 millimeters per hour with maximum rates 20 to 50 millimeters from the node and cessation of growth by 90 millimeters from the node. Spatial distribution of dry weight density revealed that the rate of biomass deposition was maximum in the most rapidly expanding region and continued beyond the elongation zone. The nutrient elements K, Cl, Ca, Mg, and P showed different distribution patterns of ion density (on a dry weight basis). K and Cl had minimal density in the leaf tips; K density was maximum in the growing region, whereas Cl density was maximum at the region of growth cessation. Ca, Mg, and P had relatively high densities at the base of the elongation zone near the node and also in the tip regions. Near the node, P and Mg densities were higher in the young, growing leaves, whereas Ca density near the node was higher in older leaves that had completed elongation. Deposition rates of all nutrients were greatest in the region of maximum elongation rate.


1 This work was supported by Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund grant No. I-1485-88.




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W. S. Peters, M. S. Farm, and A. J. Kopf
Does Growth Correlate with Turgor-Induced Elastic Strain in Stems? A Re-Evaluation of de Vries' Classical Experiments
Plant Physiology, April 1, 2001; 125(4): 2173 - 2179.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Plant Biologists