VESSEL DIAMETERS IN ROOTS VERSUS STEMS OF TROPICAL LIANAS AND OTHER GROWTH FORMS

Citation
Fw. Ewers et al., VESSEL DIAMETERS IN ROOTS VERSUS STEMS OF TROPICAL LIANAS AND OTHER GROWTH FORMS, IAWA journal, 18(3), 1997, pp. 261-279
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences",Forestry
Journal title
ISSN journal
09281541
Volume
18
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
261 - 279
Database
ISI
SICI code
0928-1541(1997)18:3<261:VDIRVS>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
For trees and shrubs it is well known that vessels tend to be wider in roots than in stems. It is also well known that vines have narrow ste ms with wide vessels, but roots of vines have been little studied. It was hypothesized that the evolution of the vine habit involved greater changes in stems than in terrestrial roots, and thus vessels in stems of vines would tend to be as wide, or wider, than in roots. Radial ve ssel diameters were compared in roots versus stems of 62 taxa from 20 families of plants based upon collections made at Barro Colorado Islan d (BCI) in Panama and Fairchild Tropical Garden (FTG) in Miami, FL, US A. As expected, for Fabaceae trees + shrubs, mean and maximum vessel d iameters were significantly greater in roots than in stems. The revers e was true for Fabaceae lianas (woody vines), where vessel diameters w ere significantly greater in stems. When comparing stems of all climbi ng species (n = 51) to non-climbing species (n = 11), the climbing spe cies had significantly greater mean and maximum vessel diameters. In c ontrast, for root vessels differences between growth forms were not st atistically significant.