木质部
蒸腾作用
生物
导水率
特质
气孔导度
寄主(生物学)
抗性(生态学)
生态学
植物
土壤水分
光合作用
计算机科学
程序设计语言
作者
Yun‐Bing Zhang,Xian‐Yan Huang,Marina Corrêa Scalon,Yan Ke,Jing‐Xin Liu,Qin Wang,Wenhua Li,Da Yang,David S. Ellsworth,Yong‐Jiang Zhang,Jiao‐Lin Zhang
摘要
Summary Both mistletoes and their hosts are challenged by increasing drought, highlighting the necessity of understanding their comparative hydraulic properties. The high transpiration of mistletoes requires efficient water transport, while high xylem tensions demand strong embolism resistance, representing a hydraulic paradox. This study, conducted across four environments with different aridity indices in Yunnan, China, examined the xylem traits of 119 mistletoe–host species pairs. Mistletoes showed lower water use efficiency, indicating a more aggressive water use. They also showed lower hydraulic efficiency (lower vessel diameter and theoretical hydraulic conductivity) but higher safety (lower vulnerability index and higher conduit wall reinforcement, vessel grouping index, and wood density) compared with their hosts, supporting the trade‐off between efficiency and safety. Environmental variation across sites significantly affected xylem trait comparisons between mistletoes and hosts. Additionally, the xylem traits of mistletoes were strongly influenced by host water supply efficiency. The overall xylem trait relationships in mistletoes and hosts were different. These findings stress the impact of host and site on the hydraulic traits of mistletoes, and suggest that mistletoes may achieve high transpiration by maintaining high stomatal conductance under low water potentials. This study illuminates the distinctive adaptation strategies of mistletoes due to their parasitic lifestyle.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI