ADAPTATIONS TO FLOODING IN PLANTS FROM RIVER AREAS

被引:119
|
作者
BLOM, CWPM
BOGEMANN, GM
LAAN, P
VANDERSMAN, AJM
VANDESTEEG, HM
VOESENEK, LACJ
机构
[1] Department of Experimental Botany, Catholic University, 6525 ED Nijmegen, Toernooiveld
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0304-3770(90)90097-5
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Flooding frequencies and intensities determine both species composition and the behaviour of individual plants along many rivers in the world. In this context, this paper describes the vegetation zonation associated with the fluctuating water levels of the river Rhine in the eastern part of The Netherlands. To obtain insight into the morphological and physiological processes of plants that have been shown to possess contrasting tolerances to flooding, certain species were chosen as being representative of the vegetation types from the river foreland and subsequently used in experimental studies. These species, of the genera Rumex and Chenopodium, were subjected to various flooding regimes in order to study their adaptive responses upon waterlogging of the soil, submergence and related changing environmental factors. This study has revealed that differential responses towards flooding in plants can be explained, at least partly, by an ability to elongate petioles and stems in order to protrude above the water surface. The hormone ethylene is involved in the regulation of this process. Renewed contact between leaves and the open air after submergence stimulates the formation of a new aerenchymatous root system in the flood-tolerant species. Increased porosity enables the plants to perform longitudinal transport from aerial and photosynthetic oxygen to the rhizosphere. The internal aeration systems of flood-in-olerant species is not sufficient to sustain an aerobic state in the root-soil environment. Another mechanism plants use to survive flooding is to change their timing of reproduction. Two strategies are involved: some species delay their flowering and seed production during flooding periods and survive as vegetative plants; others are able to accelerate flowering during short dry periods in order to produce seeds in the short intervals between two successive floods. The model system in which individual plants serve as indicator species, while additionally representing large groups of co-occurring plants, appears to be a manageable tool in studies on adaptations to flooding. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / 47
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Modelling the Influences of River Water Level on the Flooding Situation of Urban Areas: A Case Study in Hanoi, Vietnam
    Van Minh Nguyen
    Kim Chau Tran
    Thanh Thuy Nguyen
    ADVANCES IN RESEARCH ON WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS, 2023, : 121 - 131
  • [42] 100 Years of the San Antonio River: From Flooding to the River Walk and Now a Return to Nature
    Graham, Steve
    WASSERWIRTSCHAFT, 2022, 112 : 16 - 17
  • [43] Smart adaptation to flooding in urban areas
    Yamashita, Sampei
    Watanabe, Ryoichi
    Shimatani, Yukihiro
    DEFINING THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABILITY AND RESILIENCE IN DESIGN, ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION, 2015, 118 : 1096 - 1103
  • [44] FLOODING AREAS AND THE LIMITS OF LAND USE
    Guerra Tschuschke, Alberto
    ACTUALIDAD JURIDICA AMBIENTAL, 2022, (120): : 1 - +
  • [45] Flooding in the Red River Basin – Lessons from Post Flood Activities
    Slobodan P. Simonovic
    Richard W. Carson
    Natural Hazards, 2003, 28 : 345 - 365
  • [46] Increased human and economic losses from river flooding with anthropogenic warming
    Francesco Dottori
    Wojciech Szewczyk
    Juan-Carlos Ciscar
    Fang Zhao
    Lorenzo Alfieri
    Yukiko Hirabayashi
    Alessandra Bianchi
    Ignazio Mongelli
    Katja Frieler
    Richard A. Betts
    Luc Feyen
    Nature Climate Change, 2018, 8 : 781 - 786
  • [47] Increased human and economic losses from river flooding with anthropogenic warming
    Dottori, Francesco
    Szewczyk, Wojciech
    Ciscar, Juan-Carlos
    Zhao, Fang
    Alfieri, Lorenzo
    Hirabayashi, Yukiko
    Bianchi, Alessandra
    Mongelli, Ignazio
    Frieler, Katja
    Betts, Richard A.
    Feyen, Luc
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2018, 8 (09) : 781 - +
  • [48] Flooding in the Red River Basin - Lessons from post flood activities
    Simonovic, SP
    Carson, RW
    NATURAL HAZARDS, 2003, 28 (2-3) : 345 - 365
  • [49] Adaptations of Public Areas of Blocks of Flats
    Sorri, Laura
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION RESEARCH, 2009, 32 : S56 - S57
  • [50] Groundwater flooding in coastal urban areas
    Prigiobbe, Valentina
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 258