Forestry Sciences Laboratory, USDA Forest Service, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA.
Oecologia. 2010 Oct;164(2):287-96. doi: 10.1007/s00442-010-1734-x. Epub 2010 Jul 29.
Given the fundamental importance of xylem safety and efficiency for plant survival and fitness, it is not surprising that these are among the most commonly studied features of hydraulic architecture. However, much remains to be learned about the nature and universality of conflicts between hydraulic safety and efficiency. Although selection for suites of hydraulic traits that confer adequate plant fitness under given conditions is likely to occur at the organismal level, most studies of hydraulic architecture have been confined to scales smaller than the whole plant, such as small-diameter branches and roots. Here we discuss the impact of the spatial and temporal contexts in which hydraulic traits are studied on the interpretation of their role in maintaining plant hydraulic function. We argue that further advances in understanding the ecological implications of different suites of plant hydraulic traits will be enhanced by adopting an integrated approach that considers variation in hydraulic traits throughout the entire plant, dynamic behavior of water transport, xylem tension and water transport efficiency in intact plants, alternate mechanisms that modulate hydraulic safety and efficiency, and alternate measures of hydraulic safety and safety margins.
鉴于木质部安全性和效率对植物生存和适应能力的重要性,这些特征是水力结构中最常被研究的特征也就不足为奇了。然而,关于水力安全性和效率之间冲突的性质和普遍性,仍有许多需要了解。虽然在给定条件下选择能够赋予植物适当适应能力的一系列水力特征很可能发生在生物体水平上,但大多数水力结构的研究都局限于小于整株植物的尺度,例如小直径的树枝和根。在这里,我们讨论了研究水力特征的空间和时间背景对解释它们在维持植物水力功能中的作用的影响。我们认为,通过采用一种综合的方法来考虑整个植物中水力特征的变化、水运输的动态行为、完整植物中的木质部张力和水运输效率、调节水力安全性和效率的替代机制以及水力安全性和安全裕度的替代衡量标准,将有助于进一步深入了解不同植物水力特征组合的生态意义。