It is generally postulated that at the tree scale a drought-related decrease in hydraulic conductance is balanced by a decrease of leaf area We hypothesized that at the individual leaf scale drought affects the allometry between leaf area or mass and hydraulics leading to a non-linear relationships between these traits The study was conducted on well-watered and on water-stressed shoots of several apple genotypes covering an extended range of leaf area Working on dried leaves we measured leaf lamina area and mass and analyzed their relationships with the maximal xylem hydraulic conductance of the water pathway through the parent shoot and the petiole connected to the leaf lamina Drought decreased leaf area and mass in absolute values It also changes the allometric relationships between these two variables for a same decrease of leaf dry mass the water-stressed shoot had a lower decrease of leaf dry area than the well-watered shoot Our study also showed that drought affected the stem-to-petiole hydraulics with a higher hydraulic efficiency in the well-watered shoot compared to the water-stressed shoot We discuss that compared to the well-watered condition drought not only decreased leaf size but also reduced xylem efficiency through the stem-to-petiole pathway with regard to the leaf area and mass supplied
from HAL : Dernières publications http://ift.tt/1wBzTOC
from HAL : Dernières publications http://ift.tt/1wBzTOC
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