Effects of desiccation on post-planting stress in bare-root Corsican pine seedlings

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Abstract

We examined the post-planting consequences of pre-planting exposure stress on two-year-old, bare-root Corsican pine (Pinus nigra Arnold. ssp. laricio var. Corsicana) seedlings. Seedlings were lifted from a nursery and exposed to ambient conditions for periods of up to 192 h before being planted in minirhizotrons. Exposure decreased seedling water potential, CO2 assimilation rate, leaf conductance and new root elongation, and increased mortality after planting. During exposure, needle total nonstructural carbohydrates (TNC) concentration (expressed on a dry mass basis) decreased by 0.31 mg g(dm)-1 h-1; however, needle and root TNC concentrations remained high (> 100 mg g(dm)-1) at planting, even in those treatments leading to severe seedling mortality. More than 90% of the seedlings with predawn water potentials lower than -1.3 MPa at planting did not elongate new roots and did not survive, whereas a similar percentage of seedlings with a predawn water potential above this value at planting elongated new mots and survived, suggesting that this value corresponds to a turgor threshold below which new root formation is inhibited. At planting, embolization of xylem conduits in roots and shoots was low for seedlings in all of the exposure treatments.

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Girard, S., Clement, A., Cochard, H., Boulet-Gercourt, B., & Guehl, J. M. (1997). Effects of desiccation on post-planting stress in bare-root Corsican pine seedlings. Tree Physiology, 17(7), 429–435. https://doi.org/10.1093/treephys/17.7.429

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