- Norman Born13 (norman.born@physik.uni-marburg.de),
- David Behringer2(david.behringer@biologie.uni-marburg.de),
- Sascha Liepelt2(sascha.liepelt@biologie.uni-marburg.de),
- Sarah Beyer2 (beyersar@student.hu-berlin.de),
- Michael Schwerdtfeger1 (michael.schwerdtfeger@physik.uni-marburg.de),
- Birgit Ziegenhagen2 (birgit.ziegenhagen@biologie.uni-marburg.de)and
- Martin Koch1 (martin.koch@physik.uni-marburg.de)
- 1 Faculty of Physics and Material Sciences Center, Philipps-University Marburg;
- 2 Faculty of Biology, Conservation Biology, Philipps-University Marburg
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: norman.born@physik.uni-marburg.de
- February 2014 pp.113.233601Plant Physiology
We present a novel measurement setup for monitoring changes in the leaf water status using non-destructive terahertz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS). Previous studies on a variety of plants showed the principal applicability of THz-TDS. In such setups decreasing leaf water content directly correlates with increasing terahertz transmission. Our new system allows for continuous, non-destructive monitoring of the water status of multiple individual plants each at the same constant leaf position. It overcomes previous drawbacks, which were mainly due to the necessity of relocating the plants. Using needles of silver fir seedlings as test subjects, we show that the transmission varies along the main axis of a single needle due to a variation in thickness. Therefore, a relocation of plants during the measuring period, which was necessary in the previous THz-TDS setups, should be avoided. Furthermore, we show a highly significant correlation between gravimetric water content and respective terahertz transmission. By monitoring the relative change in transmission, we were able to narrow down the permanent wilting point of the seedlings. Thus we established groups of plants with well-defined levels of water stress that could not be detected visually. This opens up the possibility for a broad range of genetic and physiological experiments.
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