Lecture 10- Coping with aridity and drought IV Flashcards
What are the strategies plants employ ti survive in dry and hot environments? (3)
- Reduce radiation load
- Maximize water supply/Buffer water supply
- Water use efficiency
What is the radiation load on a horizontal leaf like?
- if horizontal (wet areas) there the sun at noon will hit the leaf the most, suffers ,most at noon
- highest amount
(• horizontal leaf absorbs most light
- vertical east-west almost as much
- vertical N-S much less)
What is an azimuth?
-orientation in 3D space
How can plants optimize their leaf angle and azimuth depending on their radiation circumstances?
- leaf can have various orientations, if horizontal (wet areas) there the sun at noon will hit the leaf the most, suffers most at noon
- eucalyptus= leaves are pendulous (vertical) blade can be east west/ south-north or anything in between
- if pointing east west, not long after sunrise= get max load, at noon= minimal, and in the afternoon then get more
- the integral is about the same (same amount of light just not in the hottest part of the day)
What does parahelitrophic mean?
-leaves always parallel to sun’s rays -always keep the leaf parallel to the source of the radiation, not that common in xerophytes however as it is difficult to engineer ( what xerophytes often do-if have a vertical leaf with east to west direction it is then very similar with how much radiation it captures)
What does diaheliotrophic mean?
-maximizes the radiation interception -leaves always perpendicular to sun’s rays
How can plants reduce radiation load by leaf shape?
reduce radiation load by leaf shape - acacia peuce= in the desert, -the leaves are like a needle= low surface to volume ratio -so not much light is intercepted
How do grasses reduce their radiation load?
-leaf shape - xerophytic grasses can roll them up in a cylinder shape (minimizes surface area/volume ratio) -sunken stomata= cannot lose water as quickly as they are on the inner side
What are the ways of reducing the radiation load on a plant?
- Leaf orientation: azimuth, angle, heliotropism 2. Leaf shape: succulents, cylinders 3. Leaf amount: drought deciduous, low leafiness 4. Leaf optics: high reflectance – wax, salt
How can plants reduce their radiation load with leaf amount?
-if less than won’t have as many surfaces to intercept the radiation -have low leaf weight ratio (M of leaves over M of plant) drought deciduous plants -can be drought deciduous= when water stressed drop their leaves
How can plants use leaf optics to reduce radiation load?
-whiteish = reduce radiation as it reflects, high reflectance (wax and salt)
How does the salt bush change its leaf optics?
- All Atriplex species(59 in Australia) are covered with unique bladder hairs • Hairs have a hugh balloon-like terminal bladder cell supported by a stalk cell • Bladders accumulate high concentrations of salt -the salt in bladders crystalizes (as they dry up and have spontaneous crystalization)
How is photosynthesis affected in the salt bush depending on leaf orientation?
- lower photosynthesis when horizontal as opposed to vertical
- if high temp persist the greenish leaf becomes white
- that reflects well and photosynthesis goes up
What are the three ways of maximizing water supply (strategy 2)?
- Water spenders 2. Drought escapers 3. Water collectors
What do water spenders do?
e.g.-river red gum= most widely distributed eucalyptus in australia -send their roots deep down into the soil and tap into water source so they never experience water stress (unless in extreme conditions)