Boursiac, Yann Pradal, Christophe Bauget, Fabrice Lucas, Mikaël Delivorias, Stathis Godin, Christophe Maurel, Christophe
Water uptake by roots is a key adaptation of plants to aerial life. Water uptake depends on root system architecture (RSA) and tissue hydraulic properties that, together, shape the root hydraulic architecture. This work investigates how the interplay between conductivities along radial (e.g. aquaporins) and axial (e.g. xylem vessels) pathways deter...
Dainese, Roberta de Carvalho Faria Lima Lopes, Bruna Fourcaud, Thierry Tarantino, Alessandro
The response of the shallow portion of the ground (vadose zone) and of earth structures is affected by the interaction with the atmosphere. Very frequently, the ground surface is covered by vegetation and, as a result, transpiration plays a major role in ground–atmosphere interaction. The soil and the plant form a continuous hydraulic system that n...
Costa Pinheiro, Rafael Bouillet, Jean-Pierre Pivello, Vânia Regina Lanzi Alo, Livia Costa, Vladimir Eliodoro Van Den Meersche, Karel Guerrini, Iraê Amaral Laclau, Jean-Paul
The savannas (called Cerrado) are the second-largest vegetation formation in Brazil after the Amazon rainforest, with about 2 million km2. Roots have been found in very deep soil layers in Cerrado ecosystems, which suggests a crucial role of deep rooting in the supply of water and nutrients over dry periods. The aim of our study was to gain insight...
Asensio, Verónica Domec, Jean-Christophe Nouvellon, Yann Laclau, Jean-Paul Bouillet, Jean-Pierre Jordan-Meille, Lionel Lavres, José Delgado Rojas, Juan Sinforiano Guillemot, Joannès Abreu-Junior, Cassio Hamilton
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Climate change is expected to increase the frequency of droughts in most tropical regions in the coming decades. A passive phenomenon called hydraulic redistribution (HR) allows some plant species to take up water from deep and wet soil layers and redistribute it in the upper dry layers where other plants and soil biota can benefit from it. In addi...
Levionnois, Sébastien Coste, Sabrina Nicolini, Eric-André Stahl, Clément Morel, Hélène Heuret, Patrick
Although the leaf economic spectrum has deepened our understanding of leaf trait variability, little is known about how leaf traits scale with leaf area. This uncertainty has resulted in the assumption that leaf traits should vary by keeping the same pace of variation with increases in leaf area across the leaf size range. We evaluated the scaling ...
Tanrattana, Mélanie Barczi, Jean-François Decombeix, Anne-Laure Meyer-Berthaud, Brigitte Wilson, Jonathan
The origin of xylem in the Silurian was a major step in plant evolution, leading to diverse growth forms with various mechanical and hydraulic properties. In the fossil record, these properties can only be investigated using models based on extant plant physiology. Regarding hydraulics, previous studies have considered either the properties of a si...
Padovan, Maria D.P. Brook, R.M. Barrios, Mirna Cruz-Castillo, J.B. Vilchez Mendoza, Sergio José Costa, Aureliano N. Rapidel, Bruno
There is increasing concern that due to land pressure and the need to maximize income, smallholder coffee farmers are increasingly being forced to cultivate in areas which are considered to be sub-optimal for coffee. Little is known about optimal coffee and tree combinations in these conditions and the degree to which crops and trees compete or are...
Nguyen, Thanh Hao Huang, Shouguang Meynard, Donaldo Chaine, Christian Michel, Rémy Roelfsema, Rob Guiderdoni, Emmanuel Sentenac, Herve Véry, Anne-Aliénor
The roles of potassium channels from the Shaker family in stomatal movements have been investigated by reverse genetics analyses in Arabidopsis, but corresponding information is lacking outside this model species. Rice and other cereals possess stomata that are more complex than those of Arabidopsis. We examined the role of the outward Shaker K+ ch...
Bruelle, Guillaume Affholder, François Abrell, Thomas Ripoche, Aude Dusserre, Julie Naudin, Krishna Tittonell, Pablo Rabeharisoa, R. Lilia Scopel, Eric
Family farms in the tropics mainly rely on rainfed agriculture. Water availability is limited to rainfall and is one of the main constraints to crop productivity. Conservation agriculture (CA) is promoted as an alternative that, among other functions, enhances water infiltration and limits evaporation from the soil thanks to a mulch of crop residue...
Fort, Florian Volaire, Florence Guilioni, Lydie Barkaoui, Karim Navas, Marie-Laure Roumet, Catherine
Understanding the water-use of plants is timely under increasing drought stress due to climate change. Despite the crucial role of roots in water uptake, relationships between water-use and root traits are seldom considered. Combining a functional trait-based approach with a water balance model, we tested whether root functional traits are related ...