Leaf conduits grow wider than thicker and are potentially vulnerable to
implosion
Abstract
Xylem conduits have lignified walls to resist crushing pressures. The
thicker the double-wall ( T) relative to its maximum diameter (
D), the greater the collapse/implosion resistance. Having xylem
that is more resistant than necessary incurs high costs and reduced
flow, while having xylem not resistant enough may lead to catastrophic
collapse under drought. Despite the importance of xylem implosion safety
in determining plant drought resistance, it is still unclear how leaves
scale Tx D to trade-off among implosion safety, flow
efficiency, mechanical support, and construction cost. We measured
T and D in over 7,000 leaf xylem conduits of 122 ferns and
angiosperms species to investigate how the Tx D scaling
varies across species, clades, habitats, growth forms, and vein orders.
Overall, leaf xylem conduits grow wider than thicker, potentially
resulting in high flow efficiency and lower cost, but at the expense of
high vulnerability to implosion. Conduits seem particularly vulnerable
to implosion in monocots, aquatic species and in species from hydric
habitats, as well as in major veins. The absence of strong trade-offs
within the leaf functional traits examined suggests that implosion
safety at the whole-leaf level cannot be easily predicted by the sum of
the individual conduits’ resistance to collapse.