This study examines interrelationships between eight leaf attributes (specific leaf mass, area, dry mass, lamina
thickness, mesophyll cell number per cm2, mesophyll cell volume, chloroplast volume, and number of chloroplasts
per mesophyll cell) in field-grown plants of 94 species from the Eastern Pamir Mountains, at elevations between
3800 and 4750 m. Unlike most other mountain areas, the Eastern Pamirs, Karakorum system, Tadjikistan provide
localities where low temperatures and radiation combine with moisture stress at high altitudes. For all the
attributes measured, significant differences were found between plants with different mesophyll types. Leaves with
dorsiventral palisade structure (dorsal palisade, ventral spongy mesophyll cells) had thicker leaves with larger but
fewer mesophyll cells, containing more and larger chloroplasts. These differences in mesophyll type are reflected
in differences in the total surface of mesophyll cells per unit leaf area (Ames/A)
or volume (Ames/V). Plants with
isopalisade leaf structure (palisade cells under both dorsal and ventral surfaces) are more commonly xerophytes
and their increased values of Ames/A and
Ames/V decrease CO2 mesophyll resistance, which is an important
adaptation to drought. Path analysis shows the critical importance of mesophyll cell volume in leading to the
covariance between the different leaf attributes and hence to specific leaf mass (SLM), even though mesophyll cell
volume is not itself strongly correlated with SLM. This is because mesophyll cell volume increases SLM through
its effects on leaf thickness and chloroplast number per cell, but decreases SLM through its negative effect on
mesophyll cell density.