Abstract

The natural habitat of Pinus torreyana, the Torrey pine, is restricted to two locales in coastal Southern California that experience substantial fog and low clouds during the dry months of a Mediterranean climate. In similar semi-arid climate systems that encounter fog or low clouds, many plants can capture atmospheric moisture and are capable of direct foliar water uptake to reduce water stress. In this study, we investigated if the needles of P. torreyana are also capable of direct water uptake. In addition to water immersion, we measured the surface properties along a needle using microdroplets. The droplet contact angle is a measure of surface wettability, and the droplet absorption is a measure of localized foliar water uptake. The results showed that the entire length of the P. torreyana needle, including under the base sheath, is hydrophilic and capable of direct water uptake. The spatial gradients of the wettability and the water uptake along the needle are relatively small. Moreover, the wettability and water uptake increase from young shoots to one-year and two-year old needles. Our results also showed that the decrease in water uptake at higher contact angles can be described by a linear regression. Compared with the leaves of four shrubs in the same habitat, Heteromeles arbutifolia, Malosma laurina, Rhus integrifolia, and Eriodictyon crassifolium, the P. torreyana needles have lower contact angles and higher water uptake rates.

Highlights

  • The ability to utilize atmospheric moisture from fog or dew to reduce water stress can be an important adaptive feature of plants in semi-arid climates

  • The natural habitat of P. torreyana is restricted to two coastal mesas with seasonal fog and low cloud cover (FLCC)

  • We found that Torrey pine needles can retain water reasonably well during the dry months, and for the first time, showed that the needles are capable of direct water uptake

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to utilize atmospheric moisture from fog or dew to reduce water stress can be an important adaptive feature of plants in semi-arid climates. Studies on how plants might capture dew via aerial structures date back three centuries (Stone 1957a; Berry et al 2019), and in some epiphytic Tillandsia species, atmospheric moisture uptake improves water balance (De Santo et al 1976). Some examples include plants in montane cloud forests (Eller et al 2013), coastal redwood forests (Burgess and Dawson 2004; Limm et al 2009), and coastal shrubs (Emery 2016). These ecosystems encounter either persistent or seasonal fog and low cloud cover (FLCC), which moderates the climate in addition to providing atmospheric moisture

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