Sack Lawren, Dietrich Elisabeth M, Streeter Christopher M, Sánchez-Gómez David, Holbrook N Michele
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, 621 Charles E. Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Feb 5;105(5):1567-72. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0709333105. Epub 2008 Jan 28.
Leaf venation is a showcase of plant diversity, ranging from the grid-like network in grasses, to a wide variety of dendritic systems in other angiosperms. A principal function of the venation is to deliver water; however, a hydraulic significance has never been demonstrated for contrasting major venation architectures, including the most basic dichotomy, "pinnate" and "palmate" systems. We hypothesized that vascular redundancy confers tolerance of vein breakage such as would occur during mechanical or insect damage. We subjected leaves of woody angiosperms of contrasting venation architecture to severing treatments in vivo, and, after wounds healed, made detailed measurements of physiological performance relative to control leaves. When the midrib was severed near the leaf base, the pinnately veined leaves declined strongly in leaf hydraulic conductance, stomatal conductance, and photosynthetic rate, whereas palmately veined leaves were minimally affected. Across all of the species examined, a higher density of primary veins predicted tolerance of midrib damage. This benefit for palmate venation is consistent with its repeated evolution and its biogeographic and habitat distribution. All leaves tested showed complete tolerance of damage to second- and higher-order veins, demonstrating that the parallel flow paths provided by the redundant, reticulate minor vein network protect the leaf from the impact of hydraulic disruption. These findings point to a hydraulic explanation for the diversification of low-order vein architecture and the commonness of reticulate, hierarchical leaf venation. These structures suggest roles for both economic constraints and risk tolerance in shaping leaf morphology during 130 million years of flowering plant evolution.
叶脉是植物多样性的一个展示窗口,从草类植物中网格状的网络,到其他被子植物中各种各样的树状系统。叶脉的一个主要功能是输送水分;然而,对于包括最基本的二叉状、“羽状”和“掌状”系统在内的不同主要叶脉结构,其水力意义从未得到证实。我们推测,血管冗余赋予了对叶脉断裂的耐受性,比如在机械损伤或昆虫损害期间可能发生的叶脉断裂。我们对具有不同叶脉结构的木本被子植物叶片进行了体内切断处理,并且在伤口愈合后,相对于对照叶片详细测量了生理性能。当在叶基部附近切断中脉时,羽状叶脉的叶片在叶片水力导度、气孔导度和光合速率方面大幅下降,而掌状叶脉的叶片受到的影响最小。在所有被研究的物种中,较高密度的主脉预示着对中脉损伤的耐受性。掌状叶脉的这种优势与其反复进化以及其生物地理和栖息地分布是一致的。所有测试的叶片对二级及更高级叶脉的损伤都表现出完全的耐受性,这表明由冗余的网状小叶脉网络提供的平行流动路径保护叶片免受水力破坏的影响。这些发现为低阶叶脉结构的多样化以及网状、分层叶脉的普遍性提供了一种水力学解释。这些结构表明在1.3亿年的开花植物进化过程中,经济限制和风险耐受性在塑造叶片形态方面都发挥了作用。