Abstract

This study on expansive growth of the first leaf of maize has two goals: one is to determine how the sensitivity of growth to changes in water status varies with the initial water status of the leaf, and the other is to adapt the pressure-jump technique of 25, Plant and Cell Physiology 30, 979–985), developed for studying growth of excised stem segments, for use on whole seedlings. Initial water status was varied by using: transpiring vs. non-transpiring conditions, seedlings differing in emerged leaf length and hence transpiring area, and root medium without mannitol vs. medium with added mannitol (to –0·3 MPa). The results show that growth changed with changes in plant water status when the water status was low, but was unaffected when water status was very high. A stepwise change in hydrostatic pressure on the root medium was quickly and fully transmitted to the base of the leaf. The increase in leaf elongation due to a pressure step of 0·025 MPa was negligible under conditions of high plant water status and became substantial under conditions of low water status. In adapting the pressure-jump method to the whole seedling, there was some loss of resolution, and the yield threshold Y of the Lockhart equation could not be estimated directly. Nonetheless, the data were suitable for the calculation of volumetric extensibility m and the estimation of growth effective turgor (turgor above Y). Extensibility was shown to increase 3- to 4-fold when leaf water status was reduced from the maximum to the point where elongation rate was halved, while growth effective turgor was calculated to diminish even more markedly.

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