A Companion to Plant Physiology, Fifth Edition by Lincoln Taiz and Eduardo Zeiger
Home
Search
HOME :: CHAPTER 3 :: Topic 3.10
PREVIOUS :: NEXT

Topic 3.10

Chapter Three References

Bearce, B. C., and Kohl, H. C., Jr. (1970) Measuring osmotic pressure of sap within live cells by means of a visual melting point apparatus. Plant Physiol. 46: 515–519.

Boyer , J.S. (1995) Measuring the Water Status of Plants and Soils. Academic Press, N.Y.

Boyer, J. S., and Knipling, E. B. (1965) Isopiestic technique for measuring leaf water potentials with thermocouple sychrometer. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 54: 1044–1051.

Brown, R. W., and Van Haveren, B. P., eds. (1972) Psychrometry in Water Relations Research. Proceedings of the Symposium on Thermocouple Psychrometers. Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Utah State University, Provo.

Dainty, J. (1976) Water relations of plant cells. In Transport in Plants II, Part A, Cells, U. Lüttge and M. G. Pitman, eds. Encyclopedia of Plant Physiology, New Series, Vol. 2. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, pp. 12–35.

Green, P. B. (1968) Growth physics in Nitella: A method for continuous in vivo analysis of extensibility based on a micro-manometer technique for turgor pressure. Plant Physiol. 43: 1169–1184.

Green, P. B., and Stanton, F. W. (1967) Turgor pressure: Direct manometric measurement in single cells of Nitella. Science 155: 1675–1676.

Hammel, H. T., and Scholander, P. F. (1976) Osmosis and tensile solvent. Springer, Berlin.

Heydt, H., and Steudle, E. (1991) Measurement of negative pressure in the xylem of excised roots. Effects on water and solute relations. Planta 184: 389–396.

Hüsken, D., Steudle, E., and Zimmermann, U. (1978) Pressure probe technique for measuring water relations of cells in higher plants. Plant Physiol. 61: 158–163.

Malone, M., and Tomos, A. D. (1992) Measurement of gradients of water potential in elongating pea stem by pressure probe and picolitre osmometry. J. Exp. Bot. 43: 1325–1331.

Nobel, P. S. (1999) Physicochemical and Environmental Plant Physiology. Academic Press, San Diego.

Oertli, J. J., Lips, S. H., and Agami, M. 1990. The strength of sclerophyllous cells to resist collapse due to negative turgor pressure. Acta Oecol. 11: 281–289.

Passioura, J. B. (1980) The meaning of matric potential. J. Exp. Bot. 31: 1161–1169.

Pickard, W. F. 1983. The ascent of sap in plants. Prog. Biophys. Mol. Biol. 37: 181–229.

Prager, D. J., and Bowman, R. L. (1963) Freezing-point depression: New method for measuring ultramicro quantities of fluids. Science 142: 237–239.

Scholander, P. F., Hammel, H. T., Bradstreer, E. D., and Hemmingsen, E. A. (1965) Sap pressure in vascular plants. Science 148: 339–346.

Slavik, B. (1974) Methods of Studying Plant Water Relations. Academia, Prague.

Steudle, E. (1993) Pressure probe techniques: Basic principles and application to studies of water and solute relations at the cell, tissue and organ level. In Water Deficits: Plant Responses from Cell to Community, J. A. C. Smith and H. Griffiths, eds., BIOS Scientific, Oxford, pp. 5–36.

Tyree, M. T. 1976. Negative turgor pressure in plant cells: Fact or fallacy? Can. J. Botany 54: 2738–2746.

Tyree, M. T., and Hammel, H. T. (1972) The measurement of the turgor pressure and the water relations of plants by the pressure-bomb technique. J. Exp. Bot. 23: 266–282.

HOME :: CHAPTER 3 :: Topic 3.10
PREVIOUS :: NEXT