Water transport in trees is critically dependent on lumen diameter of xylem conduits. It has also been clearly demonstrated, in both conifers and broadleaves, that the chain of conduit elements has a general tapered shape. This means that conduits in the distal parts (leaves, branches) are smaller in diameter compared to the base of the stem and root tips. This tapering is effective in reducing the increase of water resistance that would occur when trees grow taller, thus allowing a relatively constant supply of resources to leaves (i.e. constant leaf specific conductance). Two ambitious models have tried to describe the general structure that an efficient distribution network must match: West et al. (1999), with the so-called WBE model, ...
A recent metabolic scaling theory predicts that plants minimize resistance to hydraulic conduction i...
Xylem conduits increase in size from the apex downwards. While conduit tapering in the stem has ofte...
The definitive version of this article is available at www.newphytologist.com.• There are two optima...
A recent theoretical model (the West, Brown and Enquist, WBE model) hypothesized that plants have ev...
In trees, water flows throughout a network of xylem conduits by mean of a negative pressure gradient...
In the trees, water moves through a negative pressure gradient established between roots and leaves,...
Despite on abundance of information on the anatomical and hydraulic features of the xylem transport ...
Sap flows through a network of xylem conduits compartmentalized into growing rings. We implemented e...
The definitive version of this article is available at www.newphytologist.com.• Coniferous, diffuse-...
In plants, water flows from roots to leaves through a complex network of xylem conduits. The xylem a...
shows that hydraulic resistance in trees can be independent of path length, provided that vascular c...
It is well known that, in woody species, the vascular structure is designed for compensating the pot...
Plant vascular networks are central to botanical form, function, and diversity. Here, we develop a t...
Metabolic scaling theory predicts how tree water flow rate (Q) scales with tree mass (M) and assumes...
Xylem and phloem need to maintain steady transport rates of water and carbohydrates to match the exc...
A recent metabolic scaling theory predicts that plants minimize resistance to hydraulic conduction i...
Xylem conduits increase in size from the apex downwards. While conduit tapering in the stem has ofte...
The definitive version of this article is available at www.newphytologist.com.• There are two optima...
A recent theoretical model (the West, Brown and Enquist, WBE model) hypothesized that plants have ev...
In trees, water flows throughout a network of xylem conduits by mean of a negative pressure gradient...
In the trees, water moves through a negative pressure gradient established between roots and leaves,...
Despite on abundance of information on the anatomical and hydraulic features of the xylem transport ...
Sap flows through a network of xylem conduits compartmentalized into growing rings. We implemented e...
The definitive version of this article is available at www.newphytologist.com.• Coniferous, diffuse-...
In plants, water flows from roots to leaves through a complex network of xylem conduits. The xylem a...
shows that hydraulic resistance in trees can be independent of path length, provided that vascular c...
It is well known that, in woody species, the vascular structure is designed for compensating the pot...
Plant vascular networks are central to botanical form, function, and diversity. Here, we develop a t...
Metabolic scaling theory predicts how tree water flow rate (Q) scales with tree mass (M) and assumes...
Xylem and phloem need to maintain steady transport rates of water and carbohydrates to match the exc...
A recent metabolic scaling theory predicts that plants minimize resistance to hydraulic conduction i...
Xylem conduits increase in size from the apex downwards. While conduit tapering in the stem has ofte...
The definitive version of this article is available at www.newphytologist.com.• There are two optima...