Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: A meta-analysis of plant tissue O2 dynamics

Cite this dataset

Herzog, Max; Pellegrini, Elisa; Pedersen, Ole (2023). Data from: A meta-analysis of plant tissue O2 dynamics [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cnp5hqc8v

Abstract

This dataset includes 1,567 recorded tissue O2 levels from 112 plant species extracted from published literature. The data forms the basis of the publication "A meta-analysis of plant tissue O2 dynamics" with the following abstract:

Adequate tissue O2 supply is crucial for plant functioning. We therefore aimed at identifying environmental conditions and plant characteristics affecting plant tissue O2 status. We extracted data and performed meta-analysis on > 1,500 published tissue O2 measurements from 112 species. Tissue O2 status ranged from anoxic conditions in especially roots, to > 53 kPa in submerged, photosynthesizing shoots. Using information-theoretic model selection, we identified ‘submergence’, ‘light’, ‘tissue type’ as well as ‘light × submergence’ interaction as significant drivers of tissue O2 status. Median O2 status was especially low (< 50% of atmospheric equilibrium) in belowground rhizomes, potato tubers and root nodules. Mean shoot and root O2 was ~25% higher in light than in dark when shoots had atmospheric contact. However, light showed a significant interaction with submergence on plant O2, with a submergence-induced 44% increase in light, compared with a 42% decline in dark, relative to plants with atmospheric contact. During submergence, ambient water column O2 and shoot tissue O2 correlated stronger in darkness than in light conditions. Although miniaturised Clark-type O2 electrodes in particular have resulted in enhanced understanding of plant O2 dynamics, the use of non-invasive methods is still lacking behind its widespread use in mammalian tissues.

Methods

We performed a structured and systematic literature search to identify studies reporting O2 measurements in vegetative plant tissues. The search was conducted using the Web of Science BIOSIS database applying Boolean operators, as explained in detail in the Supplementary Materials. The search resulted in a final list of 129 studies published up until September 2022. We extracted each observation of plant tissue O2 status and entered it into a database alongside information of plant species, tissue type, light conditions, submergence status, treatment, O2 measurement technique, tissue excisions status, etc. if provided in the source.

The studies used for this review provide a wide range of ways to measure and report levels of plant tissue O2. Details on data extractions, unit conversions, etc. are available in the related publication. Data were extracted from publication text, tables or graphs using ImageJ. Please also see the accompanied README file for additional information on data structure etc.

Funding

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, Award: 19-03-KU

Danmarks Frie Forskningsfond, Award: 8021-00120B

European Commission, Award: 839542