Hydraulic and chemical signals in the control of leaf expansion and stomatal conductance in soybean exposed to drought stress
Fulai Liu, Christian Richardt Jensen and Mathias Neumann Andersen
Functional Plant Biology
30(1) 65 - 73
Published: 31 January 2003
Abstract
Both hydraulic and chemical signals are probably important in regulating leaf growth and stomatal conductance of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) under drought stress. However, until now they have not been investigated concomitantly in this species. To explore this, a pot experiment in a temperature-regulated greenhouse was conducted, in which plants were subjected to progressive drought during early reproductive stages. Biophysical parameters, viz. relative leaf expansion rate, stomatal conductance, leaf turgor, leaf [ABA], xylem pH and xylem [ABA] were followed in control and stressed plants. Drought stress decreased relative leaf expansion rate, stomatal conductance and leaf turgor, whereas it increased leaf [ABA], xylem pH and xylem [ABA]. As soil dried, significant differences between water treatments for relative leaf expansion rate, stomatal conductance, leaf turgor, leaf [ABA], xylem pH and xylem [ABA] were observed at 14, 9, 14, 14, 14 and 9 d after imposition of stress, respectively. The relationships of relative values for relative leaf expansion rate, stomatal conductance, leaf turgor, leaf [ABA] and xylem pH to the fraction of transpirable soil water (FTSW) were well described by linear-plateau functions that allowed calculation of the soil-water thresholds at which processes in stressed plants began to diverge from well-watered controls. The soil-water threshold for stomatal conductance (0.64) was significantly higher than that for relative leaf expansion rate (0.29), xylem pH (0.28), leaf [ABA] (0.27) and leaf turgor (0.25). Relative xylem [ABA] increased, first linearly (when FTSW > 0.5) and then exponentially (when FTSW < 0.5) with decreasing FTSW. Relative stomatal conductance decreased exponentially with increasing relative xylem [ABA] (r2=0.98). Decreased stomatal conductance coincided with an increase in xylem [ABA] and occurred before any significant change of leaf turgor could be detected, indicating that chemical signals (seemingly root-originated ABA) control stomatal behaviour at moderate soil water deficits. Relative relative leaf expansion rate was linearly correlated with relative leaf turgor (r2=0.93), relative xylem pH (r2=0.97) and relative leaf [ABA] (r2=0.98), implying that both hydraulic and chemical signals were probably involved in regulation of leaf expansion at severe soil water deficits.
Keywords: chemical signals, hydraulic signals, leaf expansion, soil-water thresholds, stomatal conductance.
https://doi.org/10.1071/FP02170
©
CSIRO 2003