Abstract

The mechanism of heartwood formation in Cryptomeria japonica D. Don has long been studied since heartwood formation is a fundamental physiological feature of trees. In this study, the water distribution in the xylem of C. japonica was investigated at the cellular level to reveal the role of water distribution in the xylem during heartwood formation. Samples were taken from different heights of each trunk, in which the phases of heartwood formation differed. These were designated as SIH, which consisted of sapwood, intermediate wood, and heartwood; SI, which consisted of sapwood and intermediate wood but no heartwood; and S-all, which consisted entirely of sapwood. Cryo-scanning electron microscopic observations of the heartwood-formed (SIH) and non-heartwood-formed (SI and S-all) xylem revealed different patterns of water distribution changes in tracheids between the latewood and earlywood. In the latewood, almost all tracheids were filled with water in all areas from the sapwood to the heartwood (98–100% of tracheids had water in their lumina). In the earlywood, however, the water distribution differed between the sapwood (95–99%), intermediate wood (7–12%), and heartwood (4–100%). Many of the tracheids in the xylem, where the sapwood changed to intermediate wood lost water. In the heartwood, some tracheids remained empty, while others were refilled with water. These results suggest that the water distribution changes in individual tracheids are closely related to heartwood formation. Water loss from tracheids may be an important factor inducing heartwood formation in the xylem of C. japonica.

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