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Vol. 95, Issue 24, 14256-14259, November 24, 1998
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard
University, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138
Communicated by Andrew H. Knoll, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, October 2, 1998 (received for review April 27, 1998)
Two outstanding features of the flowering plant family Winteraceae
are the occlusion of their stomatal pores by cutin plugs and the
absence of water-conducting xylem vessels. An adaptive relationship
between these two unusual features has been suggested whereby stomatal
plugs restrict gas exchange to compensate for the presumed poor
conductivity of their vesselless wood. This hypothesized connection
fueled evolutionary arguments that the vesselless condition is
ancestral in angiosperms. Here we show that in Drimys
winteri, a tree common to wet forests, these stomatal occlusions pose only a small fixed resistance to water loss. In addition, they modify the humidity response of guard cells such that
under high evaporative demand, leaves with plugs lose water at a faster
rate than leaves from which the plugs have been experimentally removed.
Instead of being adaptations for drought, we present evidence that
these cuticular structures function to maintain photosynthetic activity
under conditions of excess water on the leaf surface. Stomatal plugs
decrease leaf wettability by preventing the formation of a continuous
water film that would impede diffusion of CO2 into the
leaf. Misting of leaves had no effect on photosynthetic rate of leaves
with plugs, but resulted in a marked decrease (
Copyright © 1998 by The National Academy of Sciences 0027-8424/98/9514256-4$2.00/0
Evolution
Stomatal plugs of Drimys winteri (Winteraceae)
protect leaves from mist but not drought
40%) in leaves from
which the plugs had been removed. These findings do not support a
functional association between stomatal plugs and hydraulic competence
and provide a new perspective on debates surrounding the evolution of
vessels in angiosperms.
*
To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail:
holbrook{at}oeb.harvard.edu.
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