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Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol 49, 753-759, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press


ARTICLES

Foliar dehydration tolerance of twelve deciduous tree species

R Auge, X Duan, J Croker, W Witte and C Green
Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Station, OHLD, University of Tennessee, PO Box 1071, Knoxville, TN 37901-1071, USACorresponding author; e-mail: auge@utk.edu

The potential for foliar dehydration tolerance and maximum capacity for osmotic adjustment were compared among 12 temperate, deciduous tree species, under standardized soil and atmospheric conditions. Dehydration tolerance was operationally defined as lethal leaf water potential (); the of the last remaining leaves surviving a continuous, lethal soil drying episode. Nyssa sylvatica Marsh., and Liriodendron tulipifera L. were most sensitive to dehydration, having lethal leaf of -2.04 and -2.38 MPa, respectively. Chionanthus virginicus L., Quercus prinus L., Acer saccharum Marsh., and Quercus acutissima Carruthers withstood the most dehydration, with leaves not drying until leaf dropped to -5.63 MPa or below. Lethal leaf (in MPa) of other, intermediate species were: Quercus rubra L. (-3.34), Oxydendrum arboreum (L.) D.C. (-3.98), Halesia carolina L. (-4.11), Acer rubrum L. (-4.43), Quercus alba L. (-4.60), and Cornus florida L. (-4.88). Decreasing lethal leaf was significantly correlated with increasing capacity for osmotic adjustment. C. virginicus and Q. acutissima showed the most osmotic adjustment during the lethal soil drying episode, with osmotic potential at full turgor declining by 1.73 and 1.44 MPa, respectively. Other species having reductions in osmotic potential at full turgor exceeding 0.50 MPa were (in MPa) Q. prinus (0.89), A. saccharum (0.71), Q. alba (0.68), H. carolina (0.67), Q. rubra (0.60), and C. florida (0.52).Keywords: Dehydration tolerance, lethal leaf water potential, maples, oaks, temperate trees.
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