Abstract
With an elevator installed in a 90-meter tall Sequoiadendron to collect the samples, xylem pressure potential measurements were made approximately every 15 meters along 60 meters of the tree's height. The measured gradient was about -0.8 bar per 10 meters of height, i.e., less than the hydrostatic gradient. Correction of the xylem pressure potential data by calibration against a thermocouple psychrometer confirmed this result. Similar gradients are described in the literature in tall conifers at times of low transpiration, although a different sampling technique was used. If the data in the present study and those supporting it are typical, they imply a re-evaluation of either the use of the pressure chamber to estimate water potential or the present theories describing water transport in tall trees.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tobiessen, P., Rundel, P. W., & Stecker, R. E. (1971). Water Potential Gradient in a Tall Sequoiadendron. Plant Physiology, 48(3), 303–304. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.48.3.303
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