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Anatomical and water physiological plasticity of Grewia biloba var. parvif lora leaf and secondary xylem

SHI Gangrong1; CHENG Xuelian1; LIU Lei1; MA Chengcang1,2   

  1. 1Department of Biology, Huaibei Coal Industry Teachers College, Huaibei 235000, China; 2College of Life Science, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China
  • Received:2005-10-21 Revised:2006-08-03 Online:2006-10-18 Published:2006-10-18

Abstract: Based on the anatomical observations of leaf and secondary xylem as well as the measurements of leaf water physiological parameters, this paper studied the anatomical and water physiological plasticity of Grewia biloba var. parviflora growing in different succession stage communities. The results showed that G. biloba var. parviflora leaf was characterized by thin bifacial with thin cuticle and few stoma, indicating that it was mesophyte anatomically, while the secondary xylem had typical xeromorphic traits, such as short and thin vessel, high vessel frequency, low percentage single pores, and short fibers and rays. G. biloba var. parviflora had high plasticity in the anatomical structure and water physiological features of leaf and secondary xylem, and the plasticity index was in the order of secondary xylem anatomical structure (0.24) >water physiological traits (0.19) > leaf anatomical structure (0.18). Compared with those growing in mixed forest and Platycladus orientalis forest, the individuals of G. biloba var. parviflora in shrub communities had the xeromorphic traits in the aspects of ① their secondary xylem had shorter vessel elements, higher vessel frequency, less single porous percentage, lower rays, higher relative conductivity and lower vulnerability index, and ② their leaf had lower water potential, lower water content and free water content, higher bound water content, high ratio of bound to free water content, and less specific leaf area. The phenotypic plasticity, both anatomical and physiological, made G. biloba var. parviflora tolerate to the drought at earlier succession stages and better adapt to the mesophytic condition at later stages, and consequently, become a widely distributed and dominant species in mixed forests.

Key words: Sandy pasture, Ecosystem, Grazing effects