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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Differences in Water Relations Parameters for the Chlorenchyma and the Parenchyma of Opuntia ficus-indica Under Wet Versus Dry Conditions

G Goldstein, JL Andrade and PS Nobel

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 18(2) 95 - 107
Published: 1991

Abstract

Water relations of the photosynthetic tissue (chlorenchyma) and of the water-storage parenchyma were studied for well watered and droughted Opuntia ficus-indica, a crassulacean acid metabolism plant cultivated worldwide for its fruits and cladodes. For well watered plants, die1 changes in osmotic pressure were evident in the chlorenchyma. Droughting the plants for 4 months resulted in a massive loss of water from the cladodes, particularly from the water-storage parenchyma, which could lose up to 82% of the water present at full turgor without irreversible tissue damage. Pressure-volume curves indicated a decrease in the osmotic pressure at full turgor of about 0.1 MPa for the water-storage parenchyma cells during drought; such a decrease of osmotically active solutes was consistent with the appearance of large numbers of starch grains. The bulk modulus of elasticity was 0.36 MPa for the water-storage parenchyma cells and 2.5-fold higher for the chlorenchyma cells, which were smaller with thicker cell walls than the former cells. Mucilage, a polysaccharide occurring extracellularly, constituted about 14% of the cladode dry weight; it could hold more than 30% of the total water content of the water-storage parenchyma. Polymerisation of sugars, large elastic cells in the water-storage parenchyma and mucilage with its high water-holding capacity helped maintain a positive turgor in the photosynthetic tissue, even after 4 months of drought.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9910095

© CSIRO 1991

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