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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Temperature and Transpiration Resistances of Xanthium Leaves as Affected by Air Temperature, Humidity, and Wind Speed

Bert G. Drake, +2 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 2, pp 324-330
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TLDR
Leaf resistances decreased with increasing temperature, and silicone rubber replicas of leaf surfaces proved that the decrease was due to increased stomatal apertures, and transpiration varied less than would have been predicted on the basis of the water-vapor pressure difference between leaf and air.
Abstract
Transpiration and temperatures of single, attached leaves of Xanthium strumarium L. were measured in high intensity white light (1.2 calories per square centimeter per minute on a surface normal to the radiation), with abundant water supply, at wind speeds of 90, 225, and 450 centimeters per second, and during exposure to moist and dry air. Partitioning of absorbed radiation between transpiration and convection was determined, and transpiration resistances were computed.Leaf resistances decreased with increasing temperature (down to a minimum of 0.36 seconds per centimeter). Silicone rubber replicas of leaf surfaces proved that the decrease was due to increased stomatal apertures. At constant air temperature, leaf resistances were higher in dry than in moist air with the result that transpiration varied less than would have been predicted on the basis of the water-vapor pressure difference between leaf and air.The dependence of stomatal conductance on temperature and moisture content of the air caused the following effects. At air temperatures below 35 C, average leaf temperatures were above air temperature by an amount dependent on wind velocity; increasing wind diminished transpiration. At air temperatures above 35 C, leaf temperatures were below air temperatures, and increasing wind markedly increased transpiration. Leaf temperatures equaled air temperature near 35 C at all wind speeds and in moist as well as in dry air.

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Citations
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Active plant growth at freezing temperatures

TL;DR: Studies of ion balances substantiate the suggestion from ultrastructure work that membranes may exhibit the primary responses to low temperatures, and are presently emphasizing the investigation of membranes.
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Seasonal Variation in Canopy Aerodynamics and the Sensitivity of Transpiration Estimates to Wind Velocity in Broadleaved Deciduous Species

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors characterize seasonal variation in wind speed attenuation within a plant canopy α in four tree species with canopy wind profiles and a canopy-structure model, to quantify the impact of α on estimates of and Ω, and determine the influence of variable wind speed on transpiration estimates from a biophysical model.
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Wind-evoked anemotropism affects the morphology and mechanical properties of Arabidopsis

TL;DR: It is found that exposure to wind resulted in a positive anemotropic response and in significant alterations to Arabidopsis morphology, mechanical properties, and anatomical tissue organisation that were associated with the plant's acclimation strategy to a windy environment.
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Wind speed response of sap flow in five subtropical trees based on wind tunnel experiments.

TL;DR: In this paper, the responses of tree sap flow to wind speeds in coniferous and broad-leaved plants under steady and unsteady wind conditions were evaluated in a wind tunnel.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A method of replicating dry or moist surfaces for examination by light microscopy.

Joan Sampson
- 01 Aug 1961 - 
TL;DR: The following method consists essentially of taking a primary impression of the surface with a silicone rubber plastic and using this to form secondary transparent replicas to be used for microscopic study of surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stomatal Responses to Pressure Changes and Interruptions in the Water Supply of Detached Leaves of Zea mays L.

Klaus Raschke
- 01 Apr 1970 - 
TL;DR: Stomata of Zea mays L. respond to changes in hydrostatic pressure in the water supply of the leaves almost instantaneously and in all leaf parts simultaneously, therefore, the leaf is a hydraulic unit and their aperture is controlled by the water potential in theWater-conducting system.
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