Mt. Tyree et al., BIOPHYSICAL PERSPECTIVES OF XYLEM EVOLUTION - IS THERE A TRADEOFF OF HYDRAULIC EFFICIENCY FOR VULNERABILITY TO DYSFUNCTION, IAWA journal, 15(4), 1994, pp. 335-360
In this review, we discuss the evolution of xylem structure in the con
text of our current understanding of the biophysics of water transport
in plants. Water transport in land plants occurs while water is under
negative pressure and is thus in a metastable state. Vessels filled w
ith metastable water are prone to dysfunction by cavitation whenever g
as-filled voids appear in the vessel lumen. Cavitated vessels fill wit
h air and are incapable of water transport until air bubbles dissolve.
We know much more about how cavitations occur and the conditions unde
r which air bubbles (embolisms) dissolve. This gives us an improved un
derstanding of the relationship between xylem structure and function.
We argue that the efficiency of water transport increases in vessels w
ith increasing diameter. The vulnerability of large diameter vessels t
o frost-induced embolism is dramatically increased. Thus there is a se
lection for small diameter vessels in cold climates. The relationship
between vessel diameter and vulnerability of large diameter vessels to
drought-induced embolism is much weaker. The correlation is too weak
to permit comparative physiologists to predict vulnerability based on
vessel diameter, but the correlation is strong enough to be of some ev
olutionary significance.