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Spectral properties, gas exchange, and water potential of leaves of glandular and non-glandular trichome types in Datura wrightii (Solanaceae) James L. Smith II J Daniel Hare, University of California, Riverside
ABSTRACT: Plant trichomes commonly serve a role in mechanical and chemical
defence against herbivores, but may also have the potential to alter physiology
by reducing the amount of light absorbed by leaves, lowering temperatures, and
reducing water loss. Populations of Datura wrightii Regel in southern
California produce 'sticky' plants with glandular trichomes and 'velvety'
plants bearing non-glandular trichomes. Because stickiness is inherited as a
dominant Mendelian trait, and the proportions of sticky plants vary among
populations with the moisture availability of their environment, there may be
some ecophysiological differences between trichome types that contribute to
their ability to survive in a particular geographic location. To examine the
possible physiological significance of trichome variation, we measured the
spectral properties, midday gas-exchange rates, and water potentials of D.
wrightii leaves from sticky and velvety plants growing in a field experiment.
The differences in leaf reflectance (0.9%) and absorptance (1.3%) of
photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) between trichome types are too small
to have any direct physiologically significant effect. Simulations of leaf
temperatures based on the difference in leaf absorptances reveal that leaf
temperature would be no more than 1degreesC lower in velvety compared to sticky
plants. Gas-exchange measurements revealed no significant difference between
types in their transpiration rates or stomatal conductances. In this case,
trichome variation may be more important to plant defenses than to
physiology.
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