W. Grosse et al., PRESSURIZED GAS-TRANSPORT IN 2 JAPANESE ALDER SPECIES IN RELATION TO THEIR NATURAL HABITATS, Ecological research, 8(2), 1993, pp. 151-158
Oxygen uptake measurements have shown that pressurized gas transport,
resulting from the physical effect of thermo-osmosis of gases, improve
s oxygen supply to the roots of the seedlings in two alder species Aln
us japonica (Thunb.) Steud. and Alnus hirsuta (Spach) Rupr., which are
both native in Japan. When gas transport conditions were established
by irradiation of the tree stems the internal aeration was increased t
o a level nearly equal to the oxygen demand of the root system in leaf
less seedlings of A. hirsuta, but was higher in A. japonica so that ex
cess oxygen was excreted into the environment. An increase of superoxi
de dismutase (SOD) activity, which protects plants from toxic oxygen r
adicals and post-anoxic injury, has been observed in root tissues of A
. japonica when the seedlings were flooded for 3 days. The increase of
SOD activity, in concert with high gas transport rates, may enable th
is tree species to grow in wet sites characterized by low oxygen parti
al pressure in the soil and by varying water tables. A less effective
gas transport, flood-induced reduction of SOD activity in root tissues
, and reduced height growth in waterlogged soil may be responsible for
the fact that A. hirsuta is unable to inhabit wetland sites.