• Browse
New Feature!

History:...Browse...Skin secretion slows desiccation: lesser siren...Spinal column has strength and flexibility: armored shrew

Thank a Genius

Surface cells store water: ice plant


Loading...

Slide_show_arrows  1 of 1 Ice plant / Yummifruitba.. / LicenseCC-by-sa - Attribution Share Alike

The leaves of ice plants store water in surface bladder-like cells.

Biomimetic Application Ideas
 
  • Storing water in arid climates
  • Using multiple small-scale storage containers to build redundancy into water storage systems


[Collapse all sections] Summary
"Southern Africa is the headquarters of a vast and varied family, the mesembryanthemums…One species retains liquid in tiny bladders on the surface of each bloated leaf that glisten in the sunshine and so give it the name, apt though improbable in these sun-baked lands, of 'ice plant'." (Attenborough 1995:278)

"The aerial surfaces of the common or crystalline ice plant Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L., a halophytic, facultative crassulacean acid metabolism species, are covered with specialized trichome cells called epidermal bladder cells (EBCs). EBCs are thought to serve as a peripheral salinity and/or water storage organ to improve survival under high salinity or water deficit stress conditions. However, the exact contribution of EBCs to salt tolerance in the ice plant remains poorly understood. An M. crystallinum mutant lacking EBCs was isolated from plant collections mutagenized by fast neutron irradiation. Light and electron microscopy revealed that mutant plants lacked EBCs on all surfaces of leaves and stems. Dry weight gain of aerial parts of the mutant was almost half that of wild-type plants after 3 weeks of growth at 400 mM NaCl. The EBC mutant also showed reduced leaf succulence and leaf and stem water contents compared with wild-type plants. Aerial tissues of wild-type plants had approximately 1.5-fold higher Na+ and Cl– content than the mutant grown under 400 mM NaCl for 2 weeks. Na+ and Cl– partitioning into EBCs of wild-type plants resulted in lower concentrations of these ions in photosynthetically active leaf tissues than in leaves of the EBC-less mutant, particularly under conditions of high salt stress. Potassium, nitrate, and phosphate ion content decreased with incorporation of NaCl into tissues in both the wild type and the mutant, but the ratios of Na+/K+ and Cl–/ NO2 3 content were maintained only in the leaf and stem tissues of wild-type plants. The EBC mutant showed significant impairment in plant productivity under salt stress as evaluated by seed pod and seed number and average seed weight. These results clearly show that EBCs contribute to succulence by serving as a water storage reservoir and to salt tolerance by maintaining ion sequestration and homeostasis within photosynthetically active tissues of M. crystallinum." (Agarie et al. 2007:1957)

About the inspiring organism
Med_799pxunk_desert_flower_2 Mesembryanthemum crystallinum
Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L.
[Common iceplant]

IUCN Red List Status: Unknown
Habitat(s): Desert

Some organism data provided by: ITIS: The Integrated Taxonomic Information System
Organism/taxonomy data provided by:
Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2008 Annual Checklist

Bioinspired products and application ideas

Application Ideas: Storing water in arid climates, using multiple small-scale storage containers to build redundancy into water storage systems and resist contamination of entire supplies.

Industrial Sector(s) interested in this strategy: Water storage

Experts
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
John C. Cushman
University of Nevada
References
Attenborough, D. 1995. The Private Life of Plants: A Natural History of Plant Behavior. London: BBC Books. 320 p.
Google>>  Scirus>>

Agarie S; Shimoda T; Shimizu Y; Baumann K; Sunagawa H; Kondo A; Ueno O; Nakahara T; Nose A; Cushman JC. 2007. Salt tolerance, salt accumulation, and ionic homeostasis in an epidermal bladder-cell-less mutant of the common ice plant Mesembryanthemum crystallinum. Journal of Experimental Biology. 58(8): 1957-1967.
Google>>  Scirus>>