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Plant water relations

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Plant water relations Douglas R. Cobos, Ph.D. Decagon Devices and Washington State University * * * * * * * * * * * * Case study #3 Chitosan study Evaluation of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant water relations


1
Plant water relations
  • Douglas R. Cobos, Ph.D.
  • Decagon Devices and Washington State University

2
Plants fundamental dilemma
  • Biochemistry requires a highly hydrated
    environment (gt -3 MPa)
  • Atmospheric environment provides CO2 and light
    but is dry (-100 MPa)

3
Water potential
  • Describes how tightly water is bound in the soil
  • Describes the availability of water for
    biological processes
  • Defines the flow of water in all systems
    (including SPAC)

4
Water flow in the Soil Plant Atmosphere Continuum
(SPAC)
Low water potential
Boundary layer conductance to water vapor flow
Stomatal conductance to water vapor flow
Root conductance to liquid water flow
High water potential
5
Indicators of plant water stress
Leaf stomatal conductance
Soil water potential
Leaf water potential
6
Indicator 1 Leaf water potential
  • ?leaf is potential of water in leaf outside of
    cells (only matric potential)
  • The water outside cells is in equilibrium with
    the water inside the cell, so, ?cell ?leaf

7
Leaf water potential
  • Turgid leaf ?leaf ?cell turgor pressure
    (?p) osmotic potential (?o) of water inside
    cell
  • Flaccid leaf ?leaf ?cell ?o (no positive
    pressure component)

8
Measuring leaf water potential
  • There is no direct way to measure leaf water
    potential
  • Equilibrium methods used exclusively
  • Liquid equilibration methods - Create equilibrium
    between sample and area of known water potential
    across semi-permeable barrier
  • Pressure chamber
  • Vapor equilibration methods - Measure humidity
    air in vapor equilibrium with sample
  • Thermocouple psychrometer
  • Dew point potentiameter

9
Liquid equilibration pressure chamber
  • Used to measure leaf water potential (?leaf)
  • Equilibrate pressure inside chamber with suction
    inside leaf
  • Sever petiole of leaf
  • Cover with wet paper towel
  • Seal in chamber
  • Pressurize chamber until moment sap flows from
    petiole
  • Range 0 to -6 MPa

10
Two commercial pressure chambers
11
Vapor equilibration chilled mirror dewpoint
hygrometer
  • Lab instrument
  • Measures both soil and plant water potential in
    the dry range
  • Can measure ?leaf
  • Insert leaf disc into sample chamber
  • Measurement accelerated by abrading leaf surface
    withsandpaper
  • Range -0.1 MPa to -300 MPa

12
Pressure chamber in situ comparison
13
Vapor equilibration in situ leaf water potential
  • Field instrument
  • Measures ?leaf
  • Clip on to leaf (must have good seal)
  • Must carefully shade clip
  • Range -0.1 to -5 MPa

14
Leaf water potential as an indicator of plant
water status
  • Can be an indicator of water stress in perennial
    crops
  • Maximize crop production (table grapes)
  • Schedule deficit irrigation (wine grapes)
  • Many annual plants will shed leaves rather than
    allow leaf water potential to change past a lower
    threshold
  • Non-irrigated potatoes
  • Most plants will regulate stomatal conductance
    before allowing leaf water potential to change
    below threshold

15
Case study 1 Washington State University apples
  • Researchers used pressure chamber to monitor leaf
    water potential of apple trees
  • One set well-watered
  • One set kept under water stress
  • Results
  • ½ as much vegetative growth less pruning
  • Same amount of fruit production
  • Higher fruit quality
  • Saved irrigation water

16
Indicator 2 Stomatal conductance
  • Describes gas diffusion through plant stomata
  • Plants regulate stomatal aperture in response to
    environmental conditions
  • Described as either a conductance or resistance
  • Conductance is reciprocal of resistance
  • 1/resistance

17
Stomatal conductance
  • Can be good indicator of plant water status
  • Many plants regulate water loss through stomatal
    conductance

18
Fick's Law for gas diffusion
  • E Evaporation (mol m-2 s-1)
  • C Concentration (mol mol-1)
  • R Resistance (m2 s mol-1)
  • L leaf
  • a air

19
stomatal resistance of the leaf
Boundary layer resistance of the leaf
20
Do stomata control leaf water loss?
Bange (1953)
  • Still air boundary layer resistance controls
  • Moving air stomatal resistance controls

21
Obtaining resistances (or conductances)
  • Boundary layer conductance depends on wind speed,
    leaf size and diffusing gas
  • Stomatal conductance is measured with a leaf
    porometer

22
Measuring stomatal conductance 2 types of leaf
porometer
  • Dynamic - rate of change of vapor pressure in
    chamber attached to leaf
  • Steady state - measure the vapor flux and
    gradient near a leaf

23
Dynamic porometer
  • Seal small chamber to leaf surface
  • Use pump and desiccant to dry air in chamber
  • Measure the time required for the chamber
    humidity to rise some preset amount

Stomatal conductance is proportional to
?Cv change in water vapor concentration ?t
change in time
24
Delta T dynamic diffusion porometer
25
Steady state porometer
  • Clamp a chamber with a fixed diffusion path to
    the leaf surface
  • Measure the vapor pressure at two locations in
    the diffusion path
  • Compute stomatal conductance from the vapor
    pressure measurements and the known conductance
    of the diffusion path
  • No pumps or desiccants

26
Steady state porometer
leaf
R1
h1
R2
sensors
h2
Teflon filter
atmosphere
Rvs stomatal resistance to vapor flow
27
Decagon steady state porometer
28
Environmental effects on stomatal conductance
Light
  • Stomata normally close in the dark
  • The leaf clip of the porometer darkens the leaf,
    so stomata tend to close
  • Leaves in shadow or shade normally have lower
    conductances than leaves in the sun
  • Overcast days may have lower conductance than
    sunny days

29
Environmental effects on stomatal conductance
Temperature
  • High and low temperature affects photosynthesis
    and therefore conductance
  • Temperature differences between sensor and leaf
    affect all diffusion porometer readings. All can
    be compensated if leaf and sensor temperatures
    are known

30
Environmental effects on stomatal conductance
Humidity
  • Stomatal conductance increases with humidity at
    the leaf surface
  • Porometers that dry the air can decrease
    conductance
  • Porometers that allow surface humidity to
    increase can increase conductance.

31
Environmental effects on stomatal conductance CO2
  • Increasing carbon dioxide concentration at the
    leaf surface decreases stomatal conductance.
  • Photosynthesis cuvettes could alter conductance,
    but porometers likely would not
  • Operator CO2 could affect readings

32
What can I do with a porometer?
  • Water use and water balance
  • Use conductance with Ficks law to determine crop
    transpiration rate
  • Develop crop cultivars for dry climates/salt
    affected soils
  • Determine plant water stress in annual and
    perennial species
  • Study effects of environmental conditions
  • Schedule irrigation
  • Optimize herbicide uptake
  • Study uptake of ozone and other pollutants

33
Case study 2 Washington State University wheat
  • Researchers using steady state porometer to
    create drought resistant wheat cultivars
  • Evaluating physiological response to drought
    stress (stomatal closing)
  • Selecting individuals with optimal response

34
Case study 3 Chitosan study
  • Evaluation of effects of Chitosan on plant water
    use efficiency
  • Chitosan induces stomatal closure
  • Leaf porometer used to evaluate effectiveness
  • 26 43 less water used while maintaining
    biomass production

35
Case Study 4 Stress in wine grapes
36
Indicator 3 Soil water potential
  • Defines the supply part of the supply/demand
    function of water stress
  • field capacity -0.03 MPa
  • permanent wilting point -1.5 MPa
  • We discussed how to measure soil water potential
    earlier

37
Applications of soil water potential
  • Irrigation management
  • Deficit irrigation
  • Lower yield but higher quality fruit
  • Wine grapes
  • Fruit trees
  • No water stress optimal yield

38
Appendix Lower limit water potentials Agronomic
Crops
39
Summary
  • Leaf water potential, stomatal conductance, and
    soil water potential can all be powerful tools to
    assess plant water status
  • Knowledge of how plants are affected by water
    stress are important
  • Ecosystem health
  • Crop yield
  • Produce quality

40
Appendix Water potential measurement technique
matrix
Method Measures Principle Range (MPa) Precautions
Tensiometer (liquid equilibration) soil matric potential internal suction balanced against matric potential through porous cup 0.1 to -0.085 cavitates and must be refilled if minimum range is exceeded
Pressure chamber (liquid equilibration) water potential of plant tissue (leaves) external pressure balanced against leaf water potential 0 to -6 sometimes difficult to see endpoint must have fresh from leaf
in situ soil psychrometer (vapor equilibration) matric plus osmotic potential in soil same as sample changer psychrometer 0 to -5 same as sample changer psychrometer
in situ leaf psychrometer (vapor equilibration) water potential of plant tissue (leaves) same as sample changer psychrometer 0 to -5 same as sample changer should be shaded from direct sun must have good seal to leaf
Dewpoint hygrometer (vapor equilibration) matric plus osmotic potential of soils, leaves, solutions, other materials measures hr of vapor equilibrated with sample. Uses Kelvin equation to get water potential -0.1 to -300 laboratory instrument. Sensitive to changes in ambient room temperature.
Heat dissipation (solid equilibration) matric potential of soil ceramic thermal properties empirically related to matric potential -0.01 to -30 Needs individual calibration
Electrical properties (solid equilibration) matric potential of soil ceramic electrical properties empirically related to matric potential -0.01 to -0.5 Gypsum sensors dissolve with time. EC type sensors have large errors in salty soils
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