Leaf expansion rate varies with leaf temperature, photon flux density (PPFD), evaporative demand and soil water
status. In most simulation models, it is calculated every day by multiplying the amount of carbohydrate available
to leaves by specific leaf area (SLA). However, leaf expansion rate is considerably reduced by mild water deficits
which do not affect photosynthesis, and is not affected by a reduction in the PPFD intercepted during rapid leaf
expansion. Specific leaf area undergoes a several-fold variability depending on PPFD, soil water status and time
of day. It is increased when environmental conditions have a greater depressive effect on expansion rate than on
photosynthesis, and is decreased in the opposite case. It is therefore appropriate to model leaf expansion
independently of the plant carbon budget. Consistent characteristics can be deduced from a series of experiments,
allowing a model of leaf expansion to be proposed. (i) Time courses of relative leaf expansion rate and of epidermal
cell division rate are well conserved within a plant and across a large range of environmental conditions, provided
that durations and rates are expressed in thermal time. Maximum relative rates are common to all zones of a leaf
and to all leaves of a plant, in maize and sunflower. (ii) A water deficit, or a reduction in intercepted PPFD,
imposed in the first half of the period of leaf development affects the relative expansion rate in the deficit only, but
permanently affects the absolute expansion rate. In contrast, a reduction in PPFD causes no effect on leaf
expansion if imposed in the rapid expansion period when the leaf is autotrophic. (iii) Expansion rate is related to
evaporative demand and to the concentration of ABA in the xylem sap with relationships that apply under both
field and laboratory conditions. (iv) Tissue expansion and epidermal cell division behave as independent processes
which determine epidermal cell area at each time.