Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation.
1. The terminal shoot (or current-year shoot), as one of the most active parts on a woody plant, is a basic unit determining plant height and is potentially influenced by a variety of environmental factors. It has been predicted that tissues amount and their allocation in plant stems may play a crit...
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doaj-8d4a5c598f5d460182af9a3e0fad48792020-11-24T22:04:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0184e6216310.1371/journal.pone.0062163Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation.Hong ChenHaiyang WangYanfang LiuLi Dong1. The terminal shoot (or current-year shoot), as one of the most active parts on a woody plant, is a basic unit determining plant height and is potentially influenced by a variety of environmental factors. It has been predicted that tissues amount and their allocation in plant stems may play a critical role in determining plant size in alpine regions. The primary structure in terminal shoots is a key to our understanding treeline formation. The existing theories on treeline formation, however, are still largely lacking of evidence at the species level, much less from anatomy for the terminal shoot. 2. The primary structures within terminal shoot were measured quantitatively for 100 species from four elevation zones along the eastern slope of Gongga Mountain, southwestern China; one group was sampled from above the treeline. An allometric approach was employed to examine scaling relationships interspecifically, and a principal components analysis (PCA) was performed to test the relation among primary xylem, ground tissue, species growth form and altitude. 3. The results showed that xylem tissue size was closely correlated with ground tissue size isometrically across species, while undergoing significant y- or/and x-intercept shift in response to altitudinal belts. Further, a conspicuous characteristic of terminal shoot was its allocation of contrasting tissues between primary xylem and ground tissues with increasing elevation. The result of the PCA showed correlations between anatomical variation, species growth form/height classes and environment. 4. The current study presents a comparative assessment of the allocation of tissue in terminal shoot across phylogenically and ecologically diverse species, and analyzes tissue, function and climate associations with plant growth forms and height classes among species. The interspecific connection between primary xylem ratio and plant size along an elevation gradient suggests the importance of primary xylem in explaining the treeline formation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3637301?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hong Chen Haiyang Wang Yanfang Liu Li Dong |
spellingShingle |
Hong Chen Haiyang Wang Yanfang Liu Li Dong Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Hong Chen Haiyang Wang Yanfang Liu Li Dong |
author_sort |
Hong Chen |
title |
Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
title_short |
Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
title_full |
Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
title_fullStr |
Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
title_sort |
altitudinal variations of ground tissue and xylem tissue in terminal shoot of woody species: implications for treeline formation. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
1. The terminal shoot (or current-year shoot), as one of the most active parts on a woody plant, is a basic unit determining plant height and is potentially influenced by a variety of environmental factors. It has been predicted that tissues amount and their allocation in plant stems may play a critical role in determining plant size in alpine regions. The primary structure in terminal shoots is a key to our understanding treeline formation. The existing theories on treeline formation, however, are still largely lacking of evidence at the species level, much less from anatomy for the terminal shoot. 2. The primary structures within terminal shoot were measured quantitatively for 100 species from four elevation zones along the eastern slope of Gongga Mountain, southwestern China; one group was sampled from above the treeline. An allometric approach was employed to examine scaling relationships interspecifically, and a principal components analysis (PCA) was performed to test the relation among primary xylem, ground tissue, species growth form and altitude. 3. The results showed that xylem tissue size was closely correlated with ground tissue size isometrically across species, while undergoing significant y- or/and x-intercept shift in response to altitudinal belts. Further, a conspicuous characteristic of terminal shoot was its allocation of contrasting tissues between primary xylem and ground tissues with increasing elevation. The result of the PCA showed correlations between anatomical variation, species growth form/height classes and environment. 4. The current study presents a comparative assessment of the allocation of tissue in terminal shoot across phylogenically and ecologically diverse species, and analyzes tissue, function and climate associations with plant growth forms and height classes among species. The interspecific connection between primary xylem ratio and plant size along an elevation gradient suggests the importance of primary xylem in explaining the treeline formation. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3637301?pdf=render |
work_keys_str_mv |
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