Exploring the bark thickness–stem diameter relationship: clues from lianas, successive cambia, monocots and gymnosperms

Julieta A. Rosell, Mark E. Olson, Tommaso Anfodillo, Norberto Martínez-Méndez

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

38 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Bark thickness is ecologically crucial, affecting functions from fire protection to photosynthesis. Bark thickness scales predictably with stem diameter, but there is little consensus on whether this scaling is a passive consequence of growth or an important adaptive phenomenon requiring explanation. With a comparative study across 913 species, we test the expectation that, if bark thickness–stem diameter scaling is adaptive, it should be possible to find ecological situations in which scaling is predictably altered, in this case between species with different types and deployments of phloem. ‘Dicots’ with successive cambia and monocots, which have phloem-free bark, had predictably thinner inner (mostly living) bark than plants with single cambia. Lianas, which supply large leaf areas with limited stem area, had much thicker inner bark than self-supporting plants. Gymnosperms had thicker outer bark than angiosperms. Inner bark probably scales with plant metabolic demands, for example with leaf area. Outer bark scales with stem diameter less predictably, probably reflecting diverse adaptive factors; for example, it tends to be thicker in fire-prone species and very thin when bark photosynthesis is favored. Predictable bark thickness–stem diameter scaling across plants with different photosynthate translocation demands and modes strongly supports the idea that this relationship is functionally important and adaptively significant.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)569-581
Número de páginas13
PublicaciónNew Phytologist
Volumen215
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublicada - jul. 2017

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