Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.

Quantitative dimensional analyses of the wetting property of selected Tillandsia L. were conducted. The wettability on the leaf surfaces of three Tillandsia species and one hybrid cultivar has significant variations (p < .05). This variation is influenced by their absorptive foliar trichomes. The...

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Main Authors: Zambrano, Anna Rose C., Linis, Virgilio C., Nepacina, Maria Rejane J., Silvestre, Mark Louie T., Foronda, Juanito Raphael F., Janairo, Jose Isagani B.
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Published: Animo Repository 2020
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3096
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-41082023-07-08T03:51:27Z Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L. Zambrano, Anna Rose C. Linis, Virgilio C. Nepacina, Maria Rejane J. Silvestre, Mark Louie T. Foronda, Juanito Raphael F. Janairo, Jose Isagani B. Quantitative dimensional analyses of the wetting property of selected Tillandsia L. were conducted. The wettability on the leaf surfaces of three Tillandsia species and one hybrid cultivar has significant variations (p < .05). This variation is influenced by their absorptive foliar trichomes. The structure, arrangement and density of their foliar trichomes on the leaf surfaces and the degree of corrugated trichome wings with variations on micro−/nano-protrusion allow the liquids to increase its spreading and/or liquid repellency. Among the Tillandsia species, T. schiedeana Steudel has the densest trichomes. The average trichome densities are as follows: T. schiedeana (61.20 mm2 ± 3.36) has the highest and T. Houston (T. stricta Sol. ex Sims T. recurvifolia Hook) hybrid (45.24 mm2 ± 5.93) has the lowest trichome density on the adaxial leaf surface; while T. schiedeana (63.55 mm2 ± 10.46) has the highest and T. xerographica Rohweder (40.66 mm2 ± 17.72) has the lowest trichome density found on the abaxial leaf surface (p < .0001). All examined Tillandsia exhibited foliar water uptake. One of them, T. schiedeana had significantly greater increase in leaf water content up to 115.9% followed by T. Houston (57.37%) > T. xerographica (36.63%) > T. caput-medusae E. Morren (35.91%). Based on the results of adhesion and surface free energy of the leaf surfaces, the desirable wetting properties of all four Tillandsia plants used in this study were determined. Among the four, T. schiedeana and T. caput medusae exhibited interesting liquid adhesion on the adaxial leaf surface which makes the two plants hydrophilic on this particular leaf surface. On the other hand, the highest water drop adherence to the leaf surface is observed in T. schiedeana which is necessary for its high foliar water uptake. In this study, it was proven that structure, arrangement and density of foliar trichomes found in Tillandsia affect the spreading of liquid and leaf surface wettability on their leaf surfaces which in turn improve the foliar water uptake of these plants. 2020-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3096 info:doi/10.1016/j.biotri.2019.100103 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Foliar diagnosis Foliar trichomes Foliar water uptake Liquid spreading and wetting property Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Foliar diagnosis
Foliar trichomes
Foliar water uptake
Liquid spreading and wetting property
Biology
spellingShingle Foliar diagnosis
Foliar trichomes
Foliar water uptake
Liquid spreading and wetting property
Biology
Zambrano, Anna Rose C.
Linis, Virgilio C.
Nepacina, Maria Rejane J.
Silvestre, Mark Louie T.
Foronda, Juanito Raphael F.
Janairo, Jose Isagani B.
Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
description Quantitative dimensional analyses of the wetting property of selected Tillandsia L. were conducted. The wettability on the leaf surfaces of three Tillandsia species and one hybrid cultivar has significant variations (p < .05). This variation is influenced by their absorptive foliar trichomes. The structure, arrangement and density of their foliar trichomes on the leaf surfaces and the degree of corrugated trichome wings with variations on micro−/nano-protrusion allow the liquids to increase its spreading and/or liquid repellency. Among the Tillandsia species, T. schiedeana Steudel has the densest trichomes. The average trichome densities are as follows: T. schiedeana (61.20 mm2 ± 3.36) has the highest and T. Houston (T. stricta Sol. ex Sims T. recurvifolia Hook) hybrid (45.24 mm2 ± 5.93) has the lowest trichome density on the adaxial leaf surface; while T. schiedeana (63.55 mm2 ± 10.46) has the highest and T. xerographica Rohweder (40.66 mm2 ± 17.72) has the lowest trichome density found on the abaxial leaf surface (p < .0001). All examined Tillandsia exhibited foliar water uptake. One of them, T. schiedeana had significantly greater increase in leaf water content up to 115.9% followed by T. Houston (57.37%) > T. xerographica (36.63%) > T. caput-medusae E. Morren (35.91%). Based on the results of adhesion and surface free energy of the leaf surfaces, the desirable wetting properties of all four Tillandsia plants used in this study were determined. Among the four, T. schiedeana and T. caput medusae exhibited interesting liquid adhesion on the adaxial leaf surface which makes the two plants hydrophilic on this particular leaf surface. On the other hand, the highest water drop adherence to the leaf surface is observed in T. schiedeana which is necessary for its high foliar water uptake. In this study, it was proven that structure, arrangement and density of foliar trichomes found in Tillandsia affect the spreading of liquid and leaf surface wettability on their leaf surfaces which in turn improve the foliar water uptake of these plants.
format text
author Zambrano, Anna Rose C.
Linis, Virgilio C.
Nepacina, Maria Rejane J.
Silvestre, Mark Louie T.
Foronda, Juanito Raphael F.
Janairo, Jose Isagani B.
author_facet Zambrano, Anna Rose C.
Linis, Virgilio C.
Nepacina, Maria Rejane J.
Silvestre, Mark Louie T.
Foronda, Juanito Raphael F.
Janairo, Jose Isagani B.
author_sort Zambrano, Anna Rose C.
title Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
title_short Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
title_full Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
title_fullStr Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
title_full_unstemmed Wetting properties and foliar water uptake of Tillandsia L.
title_sort wetting properties and foliar water uptake of tillandsia l.
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2020
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3096
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