| Literature DB >> 12651345 |
Melvin T. Tyree1, Sandra Patiño, Peter Becker.
Abstract
Occasional droughts may be important in controlling the distribution and structure of forest types in relatively aseasonal north Borneo. The low water retention capacity of the coarse, sandy soils on which tropical heath forest occurs may cause drought to develop more quickly and severely than on the finer textured soils of nearby dipterocarp forest. Resistance to drought-induced embolism is considered an important component of drought tolerance. We constructed embolism vulnerability curves relating loss in hydraulic conductivity to xylem tension by the air-injection method for understory trees of 14 species from both tropical heath and mixed dipterocarp forests in Brunei Darussalam. There was no significant difference (Mann-Whitney U-test, P = 0.11) between forest types in the xylem tension at which 50% loss of hydraulic conductivity occurred. Most species from both forest types were highly vulnerable to embolism compared with species from seasonal tropical forests. We speculate that other mechanisms, such as stomatal control to prevent development of embolism-inducing xylem tensions, are more cost-effective adaptations against occasional drought, but that the attendant reduction in productivity and competitive ability places a greater premium on resistance to embolism when drought is annual and predictable.Entities:
Year: 1998 PMID: 12651345 DOI: 10.1093/treephys/18.8-9.583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tree Physiol ISSN: 0829-318X Impact factor: 4.196