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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Morphological plasticity of spring and winter wheats in response to changing temperatures

María A. Equiza and Jorge A. Tognetti

Functional Plant Biology 29(12) 1427 - 1436
Published: 19 December 2002

Abstract

Temperature change induces morpho-physiological responses, whose significance for plant function under this modified environmental condition is mostly unclear. Plastic responses to temperature changes from optimal (25°C) to chilling (5°C) conditions or vice versa, as compared with constant temperature treatments, were studied in spring and winter wheat. Plants grown at 5°C had smaller leaves, less stomata and larger root systems than their counterparts grown at 25°C. Plants at 5°C therefore had larger effective root : shoot ratio, defined as the ratio between total area of roots and stomata. Spring and winter cultivars differed in root growth, leaf growth and stomatal frequency following a shift in temperature. Nevertheless, both cultivar types reached similar effective root : shoot ratios, which were typical for each temperature. We also found changes in leaf thickness, transverse vascular bundle area and xylem : phloem ratios. Shifting temperature triggered rapid changes in leaf and root carbohydrate content and osmotic potential. Our results suggest that temperature-induced plasticity may play a role in ameliorating possible water deficits caused by large soil–air temperature differentials in natural environments.

https://doi.org/10.1071/FP02066

© CSIRO 2002

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