Sh. Emerman et Te. Dawson, EXPERIMENTS USING SPLIT-ROOT CHAMBERS ON WATER-UPTAKE FROM SOIL MACROPORES BY SUNFLOWERS, Plant and soil, 189(1), 1997, pp. 57-63
The purpose of this study was to use split-root chambers to determine
whether sunflowers (Helianthus annuus), which possess high transpirati
onal demand, can preferentially extract macropore water when they are
given the option of using either micropore or macropore water. Sunflow
er plants were grown in split-root chambers with half of their roots i
n a macroporous soil and half in a microporous soil of identical miner
alogy. The two chambers were irrigated with water of different stable
hydro isotope compositions (delta D) (tap water and melted snow water)
. By measuring the delta D of the sunflower xylem sap, it was possible
to determine from which soil type the sunflowers were extracting wate
r. It was found that sunflowers did not preferentially extract macropo
re water. Since sunflower plants possess very high transpiration rates
on a whole-plant basis, and because transpiration remains high even u
nder soil drying, we believe sunflower roots must have a consistently
very low water potential compared with the soil water potentials of ei
ther the macroporous or microporous soils. If root water potentials ar
e sufficiently low, then root water uptake cannot discriminate between
macropores and micropores.