EFFICIENCY AND EVOLUTION OF WATER TRANSPORT-SYSTEMS IN HIGHER-PLANTS - A MODELING APPROACH .2. STELAR EVOLUTION

Citation
A. Roth et al., EFFICIENCY AND EVOLUTION OF WATER TRANSPORT-SYSTEMS IN HIGHER-PLANTS - A MODELING APPROACH .2. STELAR EVOLUTION, Philosophical transactions-Royal Society of London. Biological sciences, 345(1312), 1994, pp. 153-162
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
09628436
Volume
345
Issue
1312
Year of publication
1994
Pages
153 - 162
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8436(1994)345:1312<153:EAEOWT>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Different stelar arrangements have developed through evolution of land plants. The first stele to appear was a central strand (protostele) c onsisting of tracheids or hydroid-like cells. In more derived steles ( e.g. actinostele, siphonostele), a location of the conducting elements at relatively more peripheral regions of the axis can be observed. It has been shown that the trend in stelar evolution in early land plant s from protostele to actinostele or siphonostele has little to do with an increase of the flexural stiffness in the axis. Hence, it is to be expected, that the (early) stelar evolution reflects an optimization process of the water conducting capabilities of the stem. To test this hypothesis, the effectiveness of protostele and siphonostele in water conduction was analysed numerically. The results demonstrate that the hydrodynamic behaviour of a plant axis depends not only on the relati ve amount of its conducting tissues, but also on the arrangement of th e xylem within an axis. A protostele and a siphonostele with identical distance between outer xylem boundary and site of transpiration may, therefore, be identical with regard to water transport efficiency.