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Modeling Leaf Mass

April 20, 2017

One science homework assignment that my children had while in elementary school was collecting leaf specimens during the autumn abscission. Our area of Northern New Jersey is heavily forested, so it was easy to find quite a few pristine specimens. The Native Plant Society of New Jersey lists more than a hundred trees and shrubs indigenous to our area.[1]

The most common dicotyledon genera in our area are the Acer (maple), Betula (birch), Fraxinus (ash), Malus (apple), Prunus (plum, cherry), Quercus (oak), Salix (willow), and Ulmus (elm). The front lawn of my house is adorned with two large maple trees. There was another maple on the back lawn, but it was destroyed in a storm of wet snow on October 29, 2011, an event described in this article (Oh No! - October Snow! October 31, 2011).

New Jersey forest scene

New Jersey forest scene.

(Photo by Brian Marsh at the Habitat Restoration Web Site of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, New Jersey Field Office.)


The difference in the shape of their leaves is one morphological characteristic that defines trees as different species. Elementary school students are shielded from such complications as the species problem, which is the fundamental question of how you define a species. One web site lists 26 ways in which species are defined.[2] Modern technology has either helped, or complicated, species identification by DNA barcoding, which uses genetic markers to identify species. This method, however, is of no help in the identification of fossil species.

The vast diversity of leaf shapes and sizes is an indicator of the diversity of cells and tissues from which they are composed. The leaf dry mass per unit leaf area (LMA) is an easily measured quantity obtained by weighing a dried leaf and dividing this weight by the original fresh area.[3-4] LMA is used extensively in plant biology to predict such things as the rate of photosynthesis, nitrogen content and the suitability of a plant for a particular environment.[4] However, the relationship of LMA to the types of cells and tissues of a leaf, their numbers and sizes has not been studied.[4]

Biologists from the University of California (Los Angeles, California), the University of Sydney (Narrabri NSW Australia), the Universidad de Córdoba Edificio Celestino Mutis (Córdoba, Spain), and Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH (Jülich, Germany), have developed a mathematical model of leaf mass area that produced an equation for leaf mass area based on the dimensions and numbers of cells of each type in the leaf.[3] This is the first time that the diversity of cells and tissues that comprise a leaf have been related to the overall leaf morphology.[4]

As global warming proceeds, LMA can be a useful indicator of how plants adapt to the warming environment.[4] Says Grace P. John, the lead author of the paper describing this research in the UCLA Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,
"It is hard to exaggerate the importance of LMA in plant biology — it’s like body size in animal ecology, facial symmetry for the psychology of attraction, and sprint speed for NFL wide receivers... LMA has really been the 'uber' variable for understanding plant economics, productivity and function."[4]

John, a Ph.D. candidate in ecology and evolutionary biology at UCLA, studied the anatomy of eleven species growing on the grounds of UCLA. She cross-sectioned the leaves to catalogue the sizes and numbers of cells, and she stained whole leaves to measure the vein tissues.[4] The team then developed a model and an equation that predicts the leaf mass area from just the leaf structures.[4]

As shown in the figure below, the leaf structures are the upper cuticle (UC), lower cuticle (LC), upper and lower epidermis (UE and LE), the central spongy and palisade mesophyll cells (SP and PA) where photosynthesis occurs, veins (V), that are wrapped in a ring of cells known as the bundle sheath (BS), and the bundle sheath extensions (BSE). The cells were modelled as cylinders, capsules, and spheres, depending on their principal shape.

Leaf structure in cross section

Leaf structure in cross section of a California live oak (Quercus agrifolia).

(UCLA image by Grace John.)


The equation is able to predict LMA for the analyzed species in the range of 33-262 g/m2 with a high accuracy (R2 = 0.94, see figure). High LMA results principally from larger cell sizes, higher cell mass densities, a greater numbers of mesophyll cell layers, and a greater major vein allocation.[3] Says John, "With our approach, we show that evergreen leaves tend to be tougher and live longer because they have larger and denser cells."[4]

Model validation graph of leaf mass density

Model validation graph of leaf mass density.

(Graphed using Gnumeric from data in ref. 3.[3]


Lower leaf mass area is generally indicative of greater plant growth and productivity, while higher leaf mass area makes a plant less stress tolerant, so this research can aid in an understanding of how differences at the cellular level affect the productivity and tolerance to environmental stress of species.[4] It might also assist in the development of designer crops for particular applications.[4] This research was funded by the National Science Foundation.[4]

References:

  1. Plants by New Jersey County, Native Plant Society of New Jersey Web Site.
  2. John S. Wilkins, "A list of 26 Species Concepts," Science Blogs, October 1, 2006.
  3. Grace P. John, Christine Scoffoni, Thomas N. Buckley, Rafael Villar, Hendrik Poorter, and Lawren Sack, "The anatomical and compositional basis of leaf mass per area," Ecology Letters, February 14, 2017, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.12739.
  4. Researchers develop equation that helps to explain plant growth, UCLA Press Release, March 7, 2017.

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