The formation of wood is affected by the growing season and the environment.Ring-porous tree species have distinct earlywood-latewood differences.However,it is not clear how early wood and latewood respond to drought ...The formation of wood is affected by the growing season and the environment.Ring-porous tree species have distinct earlywood-latewood differences.However,it is not clear how early wood and latewood respond to drought and the differences in adaptation.Therefore,based on the analyses of phenology,growth,and xylem development over a year,xylem development in Fraxinus mandshurica was divided into earlyw ood,transition,and latewood stages.Variation patterns of 38 wood indices from 31 genotypes indicated that the formation of wood tissues was inhibited,and the proportion of xylem cells was affected by drought at each stage.However,soluble sugar affected osmotic regulation only during drought across early wood and transition stages.To maintain water and nutrient transport during drought and to resist embolism risk,drought in the early wood stage leads to varying degrees of early wood vessel diameter reduction,with pits enlarging to compensate.In contrast,during the late wood stage,drought causes latewood vessel diameter to increase and pits to shrink accordingly.In addition,the results indicate that several wood indices correlate with drought resistance at each stage,but early wood vessel diameter,soluble sugar,and latewood ves sel diameters exhibited the strongest correlations in the early wood,transition,and latewood stages.These findings provide clues to understanding plant survival strategies under drought stress and are of significance for plant ecology research on the growth and adaptation of tree species under climate change.展开更多
基金supported by the National Key R&D Program of China(2021YFD2200303)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(32271903,U24A20428)。
文摘The formation of wood is affected by the growing season and the environment.Ring-porous tree species have distinct earlywood-latewood differences.However,it is not clear how early wood and latewood respond to drought and the differences in adaptation.Therefore,based on the analyses of phenology,growth,and xylem development over a year,xylem development in Fraxinus mandshurica was divided into earlyw ood,transition,and latewood stages.Variation patterns of 38 wood indices from 31 genotypes indicated that the formation of wood tissues was inhibited,and the proportion of xylem cells was affected by drought at each stage.However,soluble sugar affected osmotic regulation only during drought across early wood and transition stages.To maintain water and nutrient transport during drought and to resist embolism risk,drought in the early wood stage leads to varying degrees of early wood vessel diameter reduction,with pits enlarging to compensate.In contrast,during the late wood stage,drought causes latewood vessel diameter to increase and pits to shrink accordingly.In addition,the results indicate that several wood indices correlate with drought resistance at each stage,but early wood vessel diameter,soluble sugar,and latewood ves sel diameters exhibited the strongest correlations in the early wood,transition,and latewood stages.These findings provide clues to understanding plant survival strategies under drought stress and are of significance for plant ecology research on the growth and adaptation of tree species under climate change.