Dicotyledons have evolved a strategy to compensate for the increase in hydraulic resistance to water transport with height growth by widening xylem conduits downwards. In monocots, the accumulation of hydraulic resistance with height should be similar, but the absence of secondary growth represents a strong limitation for the maintenance of xylem hydraulic efficiency during ontogeny. The hydraulic architecture of monocots has been studied but it is unclear how monocots arrange their axial vascular structure during ontogeny to compensate for increases in height. We measured the vessel lumina and estimated the hydraulic diameter (Dh) at different heights along the stem of two arborescent monocots, Bactris gasipaes (Kunth) and Guadua angustifo...
International audienceFlowering plants predominantly conduct water in tubes known as vessels, with v...
Purpose of Review This review shows that a more or less con- stant rate of tip-to-base vessel wideni...
In trees, water flows throughout a network of xylem conduits by mean of a negative pressure gradient...
Dicotyledons have evolved a strategy to compensate for the increase in hydraulic resistance to water...
The xylem in plants is formed by interconnected dead cells that allow the flow of water from the roo...
Angiosperm hydraulic performance is crucially affected by the diameters of vessels, the water con- d...
Hydraulic limitations to tree height can be mitigated by widening the conducting elements toward a t...
Anatomical traits such as xylem conduit diameter and vessel connectivity are fundamental characteris...
Trees grow by vertically extending their stems, so accurate stem hydraulic models are fundamental to...
International audienceAngiosperm hydraulic performance is crucially affected by the diameters of ves...
Within a tree the lumen of the xylem conduits varies widely (by at least 1 order of magnitude). Tran...
Vertical conduit tapering is proposed as an effective mechanism to almost eliminate the increase in ...
Giant columnar cacti store massive amounts of water in their parenchymous storage tissues in order ...
As trees grow taller, the energetic cost of moving water to the leaves becomes higher and could begi...
The hydraulic limitation hypothesis postulates an increase in resistance to water conductivity as tr...
International audienceFlowering plants predominantly conduct water in tubes known as vessels, with v...
Purpose of Review This review shows that a more or less con- stant rate of tip-to-base vessel wideni...
In trees, water flows throughout a network of xylem conduits by mean of a negative pressure gradient...
Dicotyledons have evolved a strategy to compensate for the increase in hydraulic resistance to water...
The xylem in plants is formed by interconnected dead cells that allow the flow of water from the roo...
Angiosperm hydraulic performance is crucially affected by the diameters of vessels, the water con- d...
Hydraulic limitations to tree height can be mitigated by widening the conducting elements toward a t...
Anatomical traits such as xylem conduit diameter and vessel connectivity are fundamental characteris...
Trees grow by vertically extending their stems, so accurate stem hydraulic models are fundamental to...
International audienceAngiosperm hydraulic performance is crucially affected by the diameters of ves...
Within a tree the lumen of the xylem conduits varies widely (by at least 1 order of magnitude). Tran...
Vertical conduit tapering is proposed as an effective mechanism to almost eliminate the increase in ...
Giant columnar cacti store massive amounts of water in their parenchymous storage tissues in order ...
As trees grow taller, the energetic cost of moving water to the leaves becomes higher and could begi...
The hydraulic limitation hypothesis postulates an increase in resistance to water conductivity as tr...
International audienceFlowering plants predominantly conduct water in tubes known as vessels, with v...
Purpose of Review This review shows that a more or less con- stant rate of tip-to-base vessel wideni...
In trees, water flows throughout a network of xylem conduits by mean of a negative pressure gradient...