Abstract

Water deficits severely affect growth, particularly for the plants in arid and semiarid regions of the world. In addition to precipitation, other subsidiary water, such as dew, fog, clouds and small rain showers, may also be absorbed by leaves in a process known as foliar water uptake. With the severe scarcity of water in desert regions, this process is increasingly becoming a necessity. Studies have reported on physical and physiological processes of foliar water uptake. However, the molecular mechanisms remain less understood. As major channels for water regulation and transport, aquaporins (AQPs) are involved in this process. However, due to the regulatory complexity and functional diversity of AQPs, their molecular mechanism for foliar water uptake remains unclear. In this study, Tamarix ramosissima, a tree species widely distributed in desert regions, was investigated for gene expression patterns of AQPs and for sap flow velocity. Our results suggest that the foliar water uptake of T. ramosissima occurs in natural fields at night when the humidity is over a threshold of 85 %. The diurnal gene expression pattern of AQPs suggests that most AQP gene expressions display a circadian rhythm, and this could affect both photosynthesis and transpiration. At night, the PIP2-1 gene is also upregulated with increased relative air humidity. This gene expression pattern may allow desert plants to regulate foliar water uptake to adapt to extreme drought. This study suggests a molecular basis of foliar water uptake in desert plants.

Highlights

  • Water plays an important role in plant growth and ecosystem functions

  • We found that the PIP2-1 gene was significantly induced by an increase in AirRh at night (Figs 8 and 9), which suggested that the expression of the PIP2-1 gene may be independent of light and transpiration

  • We show that when the AirRh increases at night, the water content of leaves increases, resulting in a water potential gradient between soil–plant–atmosphere continuums (SPAC), which drives water transport from the air to leaves and stores it in the stems of T. ramosissima

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Summary

Introduction

Water plays an important role in plant growth and ecosystem functions. Precipitation occurring as rain or snow is assumed to be the only significant source contributing to the water balance of terrestrial ecosystems (Stephenson1990). Precipitation occurring as rain or snow is assumed to be the only significant source contributing to the water balance of terrestrial ecosystems

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