CramTrees.doc
《CramTrees.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《CramTrees.doc(22页珍藏版)》请在三一办公上搜索。
1、Salt allocation during leaf development and leaf fall in mangroves W. John Cram * () Peter G. Torr *Derek A. Rose +* Department of Biological and Nutritional Sciences,University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.+ Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences,University of Newca
2、stle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UKw.j.cramncl.ac.ukFax: +44 191 222 8684Phone: +44 191 222 7886Presented at the International Symposium on Mangroves: Evolution, Physiology and Conservation. The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan 10-12 July 2001.AbstractBy taking samples along individual branches
3、and measuring leaf size, thickness and Na+ and K+ concentrations, we have shown in Bruguiera cylindrica, Avicennia rumphiana and Avicennia marina that there are two phases of salt accumulation by leaves. This is confirmed by re-analysis of published data for other species. The first phase is a rapid
4、 increase in leaf content as it grows from bud to maturity, the second is a slower but continuous change in quantity in the leaf, via changes in ion concentration and/or in leaf thickening. Leaf thickening most not be overlooked in estimating changes in leaf contents with age. Generally, leaf Na+ co
5、ntent increases significantly, and K+ content falls slightly. Mangrove leaves thus continue as sinks for Na+ throughout their lifetime.At the end of a leafs life, just before abscission, no burst of salt accumulation has been found. Yellow, senescent leaves do not have higher Na+ than old green ones
6、. We point out that leaf drop involves losing both salt and biomass, not just salt, and hence does not reduce the salt concentration in the plant. We conclude that leaf drop is not a salt excretion mechanism, but is simply the point in time at which the leaf ceases to accumulate salt.Using a simple
7、model, the contribution to salt accumulation of slowly accumulated Na+ by mature leaves has been calculated. For Bruguiera cylindrica, the most extensively studied species, 60% of the salt in the leaf is accumulated slowly in the mature phase, thus more than during the initial phase of rapid expansi
8、on growth.The limited data suggest that gland-bearing species show smaller changes in mature leaf Na+ content than do gland-less species.Key words. mangrovemature leafsalinity tolerancesalt disposalleaf dropINTRODUCTIONWhen mangroves grow in sea water, as they normally do, salt inevitably enters the
9、 roots in large quantities. This is not because the cell membranes are permeable to salt they are not but because the channels which facilitate the flow of essential K+ into plant incidentally let in large quantities of Na+. The inwards K+ channels are about 100-fold selective for K+ over Na+, but i
10、n sea water the Na+ concentration is about 45x that of K+, and so, as elegantly shown by Amtmann & Sanders (1999), Na+ will enter root cells in significant quantities via K+channels.Mangroves and other halophytes use Na+ as an energetically cheap osmoticum (Raven, 1997), and control its accumulation
11、 in the vacuole to maintain turgor pressure. At the same time, plant cells scavenge Na+ from the cytoplasm to avoid its toxic effects on enzymes, keeping Na+ below 50 mM by pumping the ions into the vacuole to 500 mM or more, and maintaining the concentration difference between the two compartments
12、(eg Raven, 1997; Hasegawa et al 2000).In this paper we are considering not the mechanism of Na+ entry to the root, but rather the way in which the plant allocates the Na+ that does enter. Three processes are agreed as being involved (eg Tomlinson, 1994; Hogarth, 1999): 1. re-secretion from root cell
13、s, 2. accumulation in expanding vacuoles of growing tissues, and 3. excretion by leaf salt glands in species which have them. Salt arriving in the shoot is accumulated in cells in a controlled manner and if glands are present excess above that utilised is excreted. This paper concerns accumulation i
14、n leaf cells, but will first consider another process, viz.4. leaf drop.The fourth process, the shedding of old leaves, is widely quoted as a salt tolerance mechanism (eg Munns, 1993; Hasegawa et al, 2000). It is described as a mechanism for “the elimination of salt” (Tomlinson, 1994) or to “remove
15、salt from metabolic tissues” (Hogarth, 1999). Zheng et al. (1999) write explicitly Eliminating excessive salt by loss of old leaves that are rich in salt is one of the characteristics by which salt-nonsecretors adapt themselves to saline environments. Leaf drop as a means of secreting or eliminating
16、 salt?In discussing this question, words must be used with precision. No-one would argue with the statement that after a leaf falls, the parent mangrove holds less salt than before. However, the burning question for the mangrove is, does leaf fall separate salt from the plant, as do root secretion a
17、nd gland excretion? Does salt move from inside to outside the plant? The answer, we suggest, is “No”. This can be justified in several ways. First, cutting leaves off a plant is not a horticultural means of conferring salinity tolerance, and abscission is the natural equivalent. By analogy, surgical
18、 removal of a limb is never prescribed as a treatment for high blood cholesterol in humans Second, the essential difference between salt excretion by leaf glands and salt loss by abscission is that glands separate salt from the plant, they excrete salt only, whereas abscission removes salt and its a
19、ssociated biomass from the tree. Third, it is critical to distinguish between concentration and quantity. Root secretion, leaf expansion and gland excretion all reduce the concentration of salt in the tree; but losing a leaf does not.We therefore suggest that leaf shedding by itself is not an adapta
20、tion that removes salt from other mangrove tissues; it is not a process to which salt is allocated. It is simply the loss of part of the plant at the end of its life-span. Accumulation of ions in leaves during development.Expansion growth, maturity, senescence and abscission are internally programme
21、d stages of leaf development (Gan and Amasino, 1997). Leaves will, of course, maintain their value as photosynthetic organs during the period of maturity, including the import and reduction of nitrate and sulphate. During senescence they will retranslocate nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium and other
22、solutes to the rest of the plant (eg. Slim et al. 1996). Here we are asking, in contrast to the metabolites like nitrate, how is NaCl in mangroves (and by implication other halophytes) accumulated during these stages? Is NaCl only accumulated during expansion growth? A priori one might expect that i
23、nsofar as NaCl is accumulated by leaves to serve an osmotic purpose, it would be accumulated to a set concentration during expansion growth, and maintained at that concentration during maturity. The quantity would then increase with leaf area during expansion growth, and with leaf thickness then and
24、 during maturity. In this paper we show that, in contrast to the simplest supposition, Na accumulation is not restricted to the initial expansion phase, but continues during maturity and into senescence. Fig 1Mangrove leaves grow to full size in a few weeks, accumulating ions in their vacuoles as th
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- CramTrees
链接地址:https://www.31ppt.com/p-2393469.html