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Top Photo - Conifer trees such these in Utah's Wasatch Range dominate
many
of Earth's temperate forests despite an internal plumbing problem: very short
"pipes" that carry water up from the roots. A University of Utah study found
that conifer trees have highly efficient valves that make up for that handicap
and let water flow easily, allowing conifers to compete well with flowering
trees.
Photo Credit: Uwe Hacke, University of Utah.
Bottom Photo - The electron microscope images show bird's-eye-views of
the
valves that allow water to move upward through conifer trees (upper left) and
angiosperms or flowering trees (upper right), while the graphics show cross-
sections of water flow through both kinds of valves. Conifers -- including
Christmas trees -- have valves with a central "torus" through which water cannot
pass, surrounded by a porous "margo" through which water flows easily. Flowering
trees have homogenous porous valves through which water flows less
efficiently.
Photo Credit: Springer Science and Business Media, G.L. Comstock, W.A.
Cote and E. Wheeler.
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December 22, 2005 - Conifers such as Christmas
trees suffer a severe plumbing problem. The "pipes" that
carry water through firs, pines and other conifers are 10
times shorter than those in flowering trees. But a
University of Utah study suggests why conifers not only
survive but thrive: efficient microscopic valves let water
flow through conifers about as easily as it flows through
other trees.
"When you are sitting around and admiring your Christmas
tree, consider that it owes its existence in part to this
clever microscopic valve," says John Sperry, a University
of Utah biology professor who led the research team.
"Without these valves, conifers could be much less common
than they are, and conceivably their survival might be
marginal."
The journal Science is publishing the study December
23, two days before Christmas.
Sperry says that if conifers had not evolved easy-flow
valves to make up for the short length of their water pipes
or conduits, "it is doubtful they could hold their own with
angiosperms (flowering trees} in today's forests. It's
doubtful they would dominate whole regions of North
America."
While scientists cannot really know if conifers might have
gone extinct without their efficient type of water valve,
"what this study shows is that without this valve, it would
be 38 times harder for conifers to take up water, which
would put them at a serious disadvantage in competition
with flowering trees in temperate forests," says Sperry.
The study was part of a University of Utah doctoral thesis
by Jarmila Pitterman, now a postdoctoral fellow at the
University of California, Berkeley. She and Sperry
conducted the study with other University of Utah
biologists: Uwe Hacke, a research assistant professor; lab
technician James Wheeler, who has since left for graduate
school at Harvard University; and Elzard Sikkema, an
undergraduate.
The Plumbing System of Trees
The numerous parallel "pipes" that carry water upward
through the woody trunks of evergreen coniferous trees are
single-celled conduits called "tracheids" and are only a
few millimeters long (about one eighth of an inch). In
flowering trees, the pipes are multicellular conduits
called vessels and are 10 times longer, or a few
centimeters long (more than one inch).
As a result, water moving up through an evergreen must pass
through 10 times as many valves (known technically as
"pits") as water moving up through the trunk of other
trees. Sperry said that should be a severe handicap for
conifers in competing against flowering trees for water.
Yet conifers thrive, and they dominate forests in many
regions of Earth. Hacke says the planetŐs tallest trees are
conifers: redwoods and sequoias. So are the oldest trees,
bristlecone pines. So how did conifers overcome the
handicap of short pipes?
Scientists already knew that the valves between water pipes
or conduits are far different in conifers than in
angiosperms, or flowering trees, but they did not know how
that difference affected water flow. In the new study, the
biologists measured water flow through twigs from 18
species of conifers and 29 species of angiosperms.
Conifers studied included Douglas fir, subalpine fir, white
fir, lodgepole pine, various spruces, Utah juniper, Rocky
Mountain juniper, redwoods, bald cypress and conifers known
as podocarps and araucarias from New Zealand and New
Caledonia.
Angiosperms included oaks, willows, ash, various maples,
hickory, mulberry, creosote bushes, manzanita,
serviceberry, mountain mahogany, grapevine and others.
The researchers connected both ends of each twig to plastic
tubing, used an elevated reservoir's gravity to force water
into one end of each twig, and then used an electronic
balance to weigh water dripping out the other end. Then,
based on the number of conduits and valves in twigs and
their known dimensions, the biologists calculated the
resistance to water flow of both the conduits and the
valves.
The scientists found that for conduits of the same
diameter, resistance to water flow in conifers was only 1.2
times greater than in flowering trees - essentially the
same. Sperry calls that "remarkable." And water flow
actually was better in conifers than in flowering trees in
terms of resistance to flow per unit area of wood.
The pits or valves that connect the water conduits in trees
not only carry water up trees from the roots, but also
prevent air from entering the conduits and killing trees.
The Structure of Water Valves in Trees
Sperry says the range of conduit diameters vary but overlap
for conifers and flowering trees. The conduits or tracheids
in conifers range from 10 to 50 microns (millionths of a
meter) in diameter, while the conduits or vessels in
flowering trees range from 15 to 110 microns.
The valves are in "end walls" at both ends of water
conduits. In conifers, there are about 25 to 50 valves at
each end of a conduit; in flowering trees there are many
more.
These valves are disk-shaped membranes. In flowering trees,
the membranes are homogenous, with water seeping through
microscopic pores. But in conifers, the valve membranes
have what is known as "torus-margo" structure that
resembles a bird's-eye-view of a circular trampoline.
"It's like a trampoline in that the torus is the mat, and
the margo represents the supporting springs with holes
between them," Sperry says. "The margo holds the torus in
place just like springs hold the trampoline in place."
Water cannot pass through the central torus, but easily
flows through the margo pores, which are about 100 times
larger than the pore in flowering tree valves - on the
scale of one 10-millionth of a meter versus one billionth
of a meter.
The bottom line is that conifers have shorter conduits and
fewer valves, both of which would increase resistance to
water flow, "but they compensate for that because each
individual valve is so much more efficient," Sperry says.
"The flow resistance through a valve of a given size is 59
times lower in a Christmas tree than in an oak tree."
Flowering trees have longer, more efficient conduits, but
less efficient valves.
Evolution Produces Two Ways to Water a Tree
Sperry says conifers and flowering trees evolved with "two
solutions to the same problem."
Conifers, which arose more than 280 million years ago, have
primitive conduits that are short and inefficient and
evolved in some of the oldest plants some 400 million years
ago. The highly efficient, torus-margo valves evolved in
conifers and their relatives no later than 220 million
years ago, Sperry says.
Flowering plants evolved at least 146 million years ago and
retained inefficient valves that first appeared some 400
million years ago in ferns, cycads and other primitive
plants. But flowering plants evolved longer conduits to get
around the problem.
"The evolution of the specialized valve and the specialized
conduit are both ways of achieving more efficient water
transport within a tree," for conifers and flowering trees,
respectively, Sperry says.
He says that as angiosperms evolved and competed with
conifers for water, "it is quite possible that if conifers
hadn't evolved this efficient valve, they wouldn't have
been as conspicuous an element of today's forests. Being at
such a tremendous disadvantage in the competition for
water, it is unlikely they would be such a dominant element
in modern forests."
Media Contacts:
John Sperry, Professor of Biology
office (801) 585-0379
lab (801) 585-0381
home (801) 583-3064
sperry@biology.utah.edu
Uwe Hacke, Research Assistant, Professor of Biology
cellular (801) 550-8729
Lee Siegel, Science News Specialist
University of Utah Public Relations
201 S Presidents Circle, Room 308
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9017
(801) 581-8993 cellular: (801) 244-5399
www.utah.edu/unews
leesiegel@ucomm.utah.edu
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