Shrubs and trees with secondary phloem tissue produced by successive cambia mainly occur in habitats characterized by a periodical or continuous lack of water availability The amount of this secondary phloem tissue in stems of Avicennia trees rises with increasing soil water salinity and decreasing inundation frequency Hence increased water storage in secondary phloem tissue produced by successive cambia was put forward to be advantageous in harsh environmental conditions It was however never tested whether the secondary phloem cells over the entire stem of woody species showing this wood anatomical feature are indeed water-filled as expected In this preliminary and pioneering study we use magnetic resonance imaging MRI to visualize the stem water content of three species with successive cambia the mangroves Avicennia marina and A officinalis and the non-mangrove Bougainvillea spectabilis Measurements were conducted in living plants We tested the hypothesis that not only the outermost phloem tissue has high water content but also the secondary phloem tissues over the entire stem from the bark inward to the pith herewith serving as water storage sites We can conclude that all secondary phloem tissue of both Bougainvillea and Avicennia has high water contents This aligns with the contribution of secondary phloem tissue produced by successive cambia to ecological success in conditions of physiological drought Further study should however be done to understand the mechanisms through which this secondary phloem tissue contributes to the water household of plants in conditions of water shortage
from HAL : Dernières publications http://ift.tt/12PiSrf
from HAL : Dernières publications http://ift.tt/12PiSrf
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