Persistent xylem cross-walls reduce the axial hydraulic conductivity in the apical 20 cm of barley seminal root axes: implications for the driving force for water movement

Abstract. Xylem vessels in the apical 25 cm of barley seminal axes were examined by scanning electron microscopy of fractured freeze dried or critical point dried specimens. In the apical 11 cm, there were three cross walls cm−1 root in the central xylem vessel. The frequency then declined with distance but did not become less than 1.0 cm−1 root until the 22–25-cm zone. Suction was applied to the proximal end of segments of seminal axes whose surfaces had been sealed with wax to prevent radial entry of water. Perfusion of the xylem with solutions of Tinopal CBS-X revealed the conductive xylem vessels by fluorescent staining of their walls. In the apical 20 cm of the axis, only a variable number of smaller xylem vessels conduct water. Beyond this zone, the much larger central vessel becomes functional. The flow of water (Jv) in the apical zone was very much less for a given presure (△P) than in the proximal zone > 25 cm from the tip, and could be predicted by the Poiseuille equation provided the correct number of functional vessels are known. This information, together with earlier results on water uptake along the root length are used to predict the attenuation of the hydrostatic driving force for water uptake along the root length. Estimates of K+ concentrations in stelar parenchyma and xylem vessels were made by electron microproble X-ray analysis. These results show that [K+] in the xylem vessels may be two to three times greater in the zone 1–2 cm from the root tip than in the basal zone. Such a gradient of solute potential may, to some extent, offset the decreasing influence of the leaf water potential in apical zones where xylem is not fully conductive.

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