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A novel method of measuring leaf epidermis and mesophyll stiffness shows the ubiquitous nature of the sandwich structure of leaf laminas in broad-leaved angiosperm species
- Source :
- Journal of Experimental Botany, Journal of Experimental Botany, 66(9), 2487-2499, Journal of Experimental Botany 66 (2015) 9
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Highlight Leaf laminas are designed in sandwich structure, a very efficient structure used in e.g. airplane wing, which enables leaves to be thin, flat, ideal for photosynthesis but also mechanically stable.<br />Plant leaves commonly exhibit a thin, flat structure that facilitates a high light interception per unit mass, but may increase risks of mechanical failure when subjected to gravity, wind and herbivory as well as other stresses. Leaf laminas are composed of thin epidermis layers and thicker intervening mesophyll layers, which resemble a composite material, i.e. sandwich structure, used in engineering constructions (e.g. airplane wings) where high bending stiffness with minimum weight is important. Yet, to what extent leaf laminas are mechanically designed and behave as a sandwich structure remains unclear. To resolve this issue, we developed and applied a novel method to estimate stiffness of epidermis- and mesophyll layers without separating the layers. Across a phylogenetically diverse range of 36 angiosperm species, the estimated Young’s moduli (a measure of stiffness) of mesophyll layers were much lower than those of the epidermis layers, indicating that leaf laminas behaved similarly to efficient sandwich structures. The stiffness of epidermis layers was higher in evergreen species than in deciduous species, and strongly associated with cuticle thickness. The ubiquitous nature of sandwich structures in leaves across studied species suggests that the sandwich structure has evolutionary advantages as it enables leaves to be simultaneously thin and flat, efficiently capturing light and maintaining mechanical stability under various stresses.
- Subjects :
- sunflower
Light
Physiology
growth
irradiance
mechanical-properties
tissue stresses
Turgor pressure
perspective
Plant Science
Biology
biomechanics
Magnoliopsida
herbaceous plants
epidermis
maize leaf
Botany
evolution
Pressure
medicine
sandwich structure
turgor pressure
Photosynthesis
Composite material
Cuticle (hair)
Stiffness
Mechanical failure
Biodiversity
Evergreen
PE&RC
Biomechanical Phenomena
Plant Leaves
Epidermis (zoology)
Mechanical stability
Bending stiffness
mechanical design
Centre for Crop Systems Analysis
cuticle
leaf anatomy
medicine.symptom
mesophyll
organs
Research Paper
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00220957
- Volume :
- 66
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Experimental Botany
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....92cc909aaa7e55f230a7a4d50dbec144