Abstract
The biomechanical relationship between the ability of a plant organ to resist bending and the extent to which tissues are hydrated is illustrated for the cylindrical leaves of chive ( Allium schoenoprasnum var. schoenoprasnum L.). The flexural rigidity (EI), which measures the ability to resist bending, is maximum when leaves are fully turgid and decreases monotonically as a function of water potential ( r 2 = 0.99). Dehydration results in a reduction in the elastic modulus (E) of leaves. Reductions in E are correlated with geometric distortion in the transverse geometry of leaves which influences their second moment of inertia (I). The traditional theory of elastic stability (developed on the basis of the mechanical behavior of nonbiological systems) is shown to be inadequate to distinguish the behavior of E as plant organs geometrically distort during dehydration. This inadequacy results from the violation of a principal assumption made by the theory (= uniform cross‐sectional geometry). A derivation is presented that accommodates the localized geometric distortions in cylindrical plant organs and permits a valid estimate of reductions in E as tissues dehydrate. Based on this derivation, the Young's modulus of chive leaves just before mechanical failure due to buckling is shown to be less than 50% of that calculated for fully turgid leaves.
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CITATION STYLE
Niklas, K. J., & O’Rourke, T. D. (1987). FLEXURAL RIGIDITY OF CHIVE AND ITS RESPONSE TO WATER POTENTIAL. American Journal of Botany, 74(7), 1033–1044. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1987.tb08712.x
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