Skip to main content

Foliar Absorption of Intercepted Rainfall Improves Woody Plant Water Status Most During Drought

Citation

Breshears, David D, McDowell, Nathan G, Goddard, Kelly L, Dayem, Katherine E, Martens, Scott N, Meyer, Clifton W, and Brown, Karen M, Foliar Absorption of Intercepted Rainfall Improves Woody Plant Water Status Most During Drought: .

Summary

A large proportion of rainfall in dryland ecosystems is intercepted by plant foliage and is generally assumed to evaporate to the atmosphere or drip onto the soil surface without being absorbed. We demonstrate foliar absorption of intercepted rainfall in a widely distributed, continental dryland, woody-plant genus: Juniperus. We observed substantial improvement in plant water status, exceeding 1.0 MPa water potential for drought-stressed plants, following precipitation on an experimental plot that excluded soil water infiltration. Experiments that wetted shoots with unlabeled and with isotopically labeled water confirmed that water potential responded substantially to foliar wetting, that these responses were not attributable to re-equilibration [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Communities

  • Upper Colorado River Basin

Tags

Provenance

From Source - Mendeley RIS Export <br> On - Wed Sep 19 08:12:57 MDT 2012

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
Title Citation Foliar Absorption of Intercepted Rainfall Improves Woody Plant Water Status Most During Drought

Citation Extension

citationTypeMendeley
noteNotes
tableOfContentsTable of Contents

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...