Sieve tube structural variation in Austrobaileya scandens and its
significance for lianescence
Abstract
Lianas combine large leaf areas with slender stems, features that
require an efficient vascular system. The only extant member of the
Austrobaileyaceae is an endemic twining liana of the tropical Australian
forests with well-known xylem hydraulics, but the vascular phloem
continuum aboveground remains understudied. Microscopy analysis across
leaf veins and stems of A. scandens revealed a low foliar xylem to
phloem ratio, with isodiametric vascular elements along the midrib, but
tapered across vein orders. Small sieve plate pore radii increased from
0.08 µm in minor veins to 0.12 µm in the petiole, but only to 0.20 µm at
the stem base, tens of meters away. In searcher branches, phloem
conduits contained a pectin-rich wall and simple plates, whereas in
twinning stems, conduits connected through highly-angled-densely
populated sieve plates. Twisted and elongated stems of A. scandens
display a high hydraulic resistance of phloem conduits, which decreases
from leaves to stems, efficiently delivering photoassimilate from
sources under Münch predictions. Sink strength of a continuously growing
canopy might be stronger than in self-supporting understory plants,
favoring resource allocation to aerial organs in angiosperms that
colonized the vertical niche.