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1.
Freezing and thawing of the endemic moss species Grimmia antarctici Card, caused photoinhibition. When snow cover was removed from moss in the field, resulting in exposure to fluctuating temperatures and light conditions, photoinhibition, measured as a reduction in the ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll a fluorescence (Fv/Fm), was observed. The extent of photoinhibition was highly variable and appeared to be reversible during periods of warmer temperatures. A series of controlled laboratory studies found that the light conditions that prevail between freezing and thawing events influenced the recovery from photoinhibition observed during freezing and thawing, with low light conditions facilitating the greatest rates of recovery. After four cycles of freezing and thawing, recovery from photoinhibition in hydrated moss was achieved within 12 h of transfer to 5°C and 15 μmol quanta m?2 s?1. These results favour the hypothesis that photoinhibition observed during freezing represents a protective process involving the down-regulation of photo-system II when photosynthetic carbon assimilation is limited by low temperatures.  相似文献   

2.
We report the photosynthetic characteristics of a C3 shade plant native to the tropical rain forest understory. It was shown that Elatostema repens Lour. (Hall) f. (Urticaceae) presents a large light adjustment capacity. The effects of several lightfleck sequences on photoinhibition of photosynthesis and carbon gain are analyzed. Photoinhibition is measured both as a decrease in leaf net CO2 uptake in limiting light (shown to be linearly correlated to quantum yield of O2 evolution measured at saturating CO2) and as a decrease of the ratio of variable fluorescence (Fv) to maximum fluorescence (Fmax) measured in liquid nitrogen. It is shown that lightflecks (from 10 to 30 min in duration) of 700 μmol m–2 s–1 (high light) induce photoinhibition, and that the effects of those successive high light periods are additive; there is apparently no recovery from photoinhibition during the low light periods (from 10 to 45 min in duration). In contrast, the Fv/Fmax ratio, though decreasing similarly to quantum yield of net CO2 uptake on leaves submitted to a continuous illumination of 700 μmol m–2 s–1, is only decreased a little on leaves submitted to lightfleck sequences of the same photon flux density. Lightflecks of 250 μmol m–2 s–1 are not photoinhibitory. Compared to the control maintained under light growth condition (40 μmol m–2 s–1) carbon gain is increased on leaves submitted to lightflecks; this gain remains high throughout the light cycles on leaves submitted to nonphotoinhibitory lightflecks and to the photoinhibitory lightflecks followed by the shortest low light period. In the other cases, carbon gain, higher than that of the control at the beginning of the treatments, decreases and becomes lower than the control carbon gain. Finally, the relevance of photoinhibition in the tropical rain forest understory environment is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Chronic photoinhibition in seedlings of tropical trees   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Seedlings of five canopy species of tropical trees from Costa Rica and Puerto Rico were grown in full shade (midday range of photosynthetic photon flux density [PPFD], 100–140 μmol m?2 s?1), partial shade (midday PPFD, 400–600 μmol m?2 s?1) and full sun (midday PPFD, 1 500–1 800 μmol m?2 s?1) for 3 months. The species were Ochroma lagopus (Bombacaceae), a pioneer species; Inga edulis (Fabaceae), found in secondary forest; and Dipteryx panamensis (Fabaceae), Hampea appendiculata (Malvaceae), and Manilkara bidentata (Sapotaceae), three species characteristic of primary forest. After the plants were placed in the dark overnight, chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics were measured for recently expanded and mature leaves. The ratio of variable fluorescence to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) was used to estimate the degree of chronic photoinhibition. Only individuals of one species, Dipteryx panamensis, showed significant depression of Fv/Fm after long-term exposure to full sun. The depression was highly correlated with quantum yield of O2 evolution which also declined after exposure to full sun. The decline may have been related to foliar N concentration. Although all plants were supplied with ample nutrients, foliar N did not increase significantly for Dipteryx seedlings in full sun, whereas it did for Ochroma and Inga. Leaf age affected Fv/Fm only in the cases of Manilkara, where it was slightly lower in recently expanded leaves, and of Dipteryx where it interacted with the effects of light regime. We conclude that chronic photoinhibition is not common in seedlings of canopy trees of tropical rain forests except when availability of mineral nutrients may be limiting.  相似文献   

4.
Disturbance or rainforest is often followed by mass mortality of understorey seedlings. Transitions of shade grown plants to full sunlight can cause reductions in the efficiency with which light is used in photosynthesis, called photoinhibition. In order to assess the influence of photoinhibition on mortality and growth after rainforest disturbance this study examined photoinhibition in both simulated and real forest disturbances in northern Papua New Guinea. In an experiment simulating rainforest disturbance, exposure of shade-grown plants to full sunlight resulted in abrupt decreases in the chlorophyll fluorescence parameter F v/F m that is characteristic of photoinhibition. However, in the well-watered plants used in these experiments there were no fatalities during 3 weeks after exposure to full sunlight. Thus, it is unlikely that photoinhibition, alone, is responsible for seedling fatalities after rainforest disturbances, but more likely that fatalities are due to photoinhibition in conjunction with other environmental stress. There were differences between the response of species to the simulated disturbance that concurred with their preferred habitats. For example, species form the genus Barringtonia, which is commonly found in shaded understorey environments, underwent greater reductions in F v/F m and were slower to recover than species that usually inhabit high solar radiation environments. The extent of photoinhibition and the rate of recovery appeared to be dependent on avoidance of direct solar radiation by altering leaf angles and on increasing maximum photosynthetic rates. A field survey of photoinhibition in man-made rainforest gaps corroborated the findings of the simulated disturbance experiment showing that plant species commonly found in shaded environments showed a greater degree of photoinhibition in forest gaps at midday than those species which are classified as species that benefit from gaps or specialist gap inhabitors.  相似文献   

5.
The sudden increase in irradiance after canopy disturbance in primary forest together with the accompanying increase in leaf temperatures is known to cause photoinhibition in shade acclimated foliage of understorey plants. We hypothesized that there is species specific variation among understorey saplings in the magnitude of photoinhibition in response to gap creation, which is related to their requirement for overstorey disturbance. Eleven more or less circular gaps were created varying in size from 60 up to 1459 m2. Photoinhibition was assessed by determining predawn and midday Fv/Fm using chlorophyll fluorescence at two occasions during the first 3 weeks after creation of the gaps. The light environment was assessed using hemispherical photography. Five species that occurred in sufficient numbers in the understorey after gap creation were measured. They all showed an increase of photoinhibition with increasing gap size. Variation in exposure to direct sunlight within gaps contributed also to variation in photoinhibition. Dynamic photoinhibition, the overnight increase in Fv/Fm, was about 20% of total photoinhibition as measured at midday. The species responded quantitatively different. Oxandra asbeckii was most sensitive as evident from a decrease of predawn Fv/Fm from 0.79 in the understorey of undisturbed forest to 0.70 in the smallest and further to 0.41 in the largest gaps. Catostemma fragrans, the least sensitive species showed hardly any photoinhibition in the smallest gaps and less in the largest ones, whereas Lecythis concertiflora, Licania heteromorpha, and Chlorocardium rodiei had intermediate responses. Species rank order in sensitivity to photoinhibition was maintained across the whole range of gap sizes. The relationship between sensitivity to photoinhibition and species-specific gap size preference for regeneration is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Photosynthetic response to high light was determined for Bull kelp, Nereocystis luetkeana (K. Mertens) Postels and Ruprecht in order to understand how this species is affected by short‐term fluctuations in irradiance. Exposure of N. luetkeana blades to high intensity photosynthetically active radiation (1000 µmol photons m?2 s–1) caused increased non‐photochemical quenching of fluorescence and higher de‐epoxidation ratios for xanthophyll pigments indicating that energy‐quenching xanthophylls were used to protect blades against photoinhibition. Despite initiation of these photoprotective mechanisms, maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (Fv/Fm) decreased 40% in response to a 60 min exposure to 1000 µmol photons m?2 s–1 photosynthetically active radiation indicating that photoinhibition had occurred. Light‐saturated rates of oxygen evolution were not changed significantly by the high light treatment. Recovery of maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II to within 8% of initial values occurred after a 300‐min dim light period. Younger sections of the blades were slightly more susceptible to high light damage than older sections. Middle sections of the blades were more prone to light‐induced damage at water temperatures of 7°C or 18°C, as compared to 13°C. Exposure to biologically effective ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐Bbe) (up to 4.5 kJ m–2 day–1) in photoinhibitory light conditions did not significantly affect light‐induced damage to photosystem II.  相似文献   

7.
The susceptibility to photoinhibition of tree species from three different successional stages were examined using chlorophyll fluorescence and gas exchange techniques. The three deciduous broadleaf tree species were Betula platyphylla var. japonica, pioneer and early successional, Quercus mongolica, intermediate shade‐tolerant and mid‐successional, and Acer mono, shade‐tolerant and late successional. Tree seedlings were raised under three light regimes: full sunlight (open), 10% full sun, and 5% full sun. Susceptibility to photoinhibition was assessed on the basis of the recovery kinetics of the ratio of vaviable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) of detached leaf discs exposed to about 2000 μmol m?1 s?1 photon flux density (PFD) for 2 h under controlled conditions (25 to 28 °C, fully hydrated). Differences in susceptibility to photodamage among species were not significant in the open and 10% full sun treatments. But in 5% full sun, B. platyphylla sustained a significantly greater photodamage than other species, probably associated with having the lowest photosynthetic capacity indicated by light‐saturated photosynthetic rate (B. platyphylla, 9·87, 5·85 and 2·82; Q. mongolica, 8·05, 6·28 and 4·41; A. mono, 7·93, 6·11 and 5·08 μmol CO2 m?1 s?1for open, 10% and 5% full sun, respectively). To simulate a gap formation and assess its complex effects including high temperature and water stress in addition to strong light on the susceptibility to photoinhibition, we examined photoinhibition in the field by means of monitoring ΔF/Fm on the first day of transfer to natural daylight. Compared with ΔF/Fm in AM, the lower ΔF/Fm in PM responding to lower PFD following high PFD around noon indicated that photoinhibition occurred in plants grown in 10 and 5% full sun. The diurnal changes of ΔF/Fm showed that Q. mongolica grown in 5% full sun was less susceptible to photoinhibition than A. mono although they showed little differences both in photosynthetic capacity in intact leaves and susceptibility to photoinhibition based on leaf disc measurements. These results suggest that shade‐grown Q. mongolica had a higher tolerance for additional stresses such as high temperature and water stress in the field, possibly due to their lower plasticity in leaf anatomy to low light environment.  相似文献   

8.
To analyze acclimation of Euterpe edulis seedlings to changes in light availability, we transferred three-year-old seedlings cultivated for six months under natural shade understory [≈ 1.3 mol(photon) m?2 d?1] to a forest gap [≈ 25.0 mol(photon) m?2 d?1]. After the transfer, changes in chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf gas-exchange parameters, as well as in the light-response curves of photosynthesis and photosynthetic induction parameters, were analyzed during the following 110 days. Simultaneously measured photosynthetic characteristics in the shaded seedlings grown in understory served as the control. Despite the fact that the understory seedlings were under suboptimal conditions to achieve their light-saturated net photosynthetic rate (P Nmax), light-response curves and photosynthetic induction parameters indicated that the species had the low respiration rate and a fast opening of stomata in response to the intermittent occurrence of sunflecks, which exerted a feed-forward stimulation on P Nmax. Sudden exposure to high light induced photoinhibition during the first week after the transfer of seedlings to gap, as it was shown by the abrupt decline of the maximal quantum yield of PSII photochemistry (Fv/Fm). The photoinhibition showed the time-dependent dynamics, as the Fv/Fm of the seedlings transferred to the forest gap recovered completely after 110 days. Furthermore, the net photosynthetic rate increased 3.5-fold in relation to priorexposure values. In summary, these data indicated that more than 21 days was required for the shade-acclimated seedlings to recover from photoinhibition and to relax induction photosynthetic limitations following the sudden exposure to high light. Moreover, the species responded very quickly to light availability; it highlights the importance of sunflecks to understory seedlings.  相似文献   

9.
Leaf discs of the shade plant Tradescantia albiflora Kunth grown at 50 μmol · m?2 · s?1, and the facultative sun/shade plant Pisum sativum L. grown at 50 or 300 μmol · m?2, s?1, were photoinhibited for 4 h in 1700 μmol photons m?2 · s?1 at 22° C. The effects of photoinhibition on the following parameters were studied: i) photosystem II (PSII) function; ii) amount of D1 protein in the PSII reaction centre; iii) dependence of photoinhibition and its recovery on chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis; and, iv) the sensitivity of photosynthesis to photoinhibition in the presence or absence of the carotenoid zeaxanthin. We show that: i) despite different sensitivities to photoinhibition, photoinhibition in all three plants occurred at the reaction centre of PSII; ii) there was no correlation between the extent of photoinhibition and the degradation of the D1 protein; iii) the susceptibility to photoinhibition by blockage of chloroplas-tencoded protein synthesis was much less in shade plants than in plants acclimated to higher light; and iv) inhibition of zeaxanthin formation increased the sensitivity to photoinhibition in pea, but not in the shade plant Tradescantia. We suggest that there are mechanistic differences in photoinhibition of sun and shade plants. In sun plants, an active repair cycle of PSII replaces photoinhibited reaction centres with photochemically active ones, thereby conferring partial protection against photoinhibition. However, in shade plants, this repair cycle is less important for protection against photoinhibition; instead, photoinhibited PSII reaction centres may confer, as they accumulate, increased protection of the remaining connected, functional PSII centres by controlled, nonphotochemical dissipation of excess excitation energy.  相似文献   

10.
Six genotypes of Zea mays L. were grown in pots inside a glasshouse at a mean temperature of 22±2°C and a minimum photosynthetic photon flux density (Q) during the daylight period of 400 μmol m?2 s?1. Chilling-dependent photoinhibition was induced by exposing plants to a temperature of 7°C and a Q of 1 000 μmol m?2 s?1 for 6 h. Recovery from photoinhibition was then followed at a temperature of 25°C and a Q of 200 μmol m?2 s?1. Leaf gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence were measured on attached leaves at room temperature prior to the photoinhibitory treatments and at 6 sampling intervals from 0 to 24 h during the recovery period. The relative water content (RWC) was also measured during the recovery period. The results showed a significant genotypic variation in the susceptibility to and rate of recovery from chilling-dependent photoinhibition of photosynthesis in Zea mays seedlings. The Highland Pool 1a from highland sites in Mexico was the least susceptible to chill-induced photoinhibition, but had the slowest rate of recovery. The hybrid variety LG11 showed the highest rate of recovery, whilst the inbred line ZPF307 was the most susceptible to chill-induced photoinhibition. Susceptibility to photoinhibition and subsequent recovery were at least partially independent, suggesting that selection for improved genotypes will require independent selection for both tolerance and capacity for recovery. Although chlorophyll fluorescence provided a more rapid method of assessing the occurrence of photoinhibition, it was not as effective as direct gas-exchange measurements of the maximum quantum yield of photosynthesis (φ) in separating genotypes with respect to their susceptibility to photoinhibition, especially in the most vulnerable genotypes such as ZPF307. Water stress induced by chilling and high Q treatments appeared to impair the recovery processes. Decreases in stomatal conductance (gs) produce a significant decrease in intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci), although this decrease was never so extreme that it limited photosynthetic rates at the light intensities used to determine φ. Nevertheless, closure of stomata in patches, producing local restriction of CO2 supply, would explain the poor correlation between chlorophyll fluorescence and quantum yield measurements in some genotypes immediately after photoinhibitory treatments.  相似文献   

11.
Understanding of the physiological responses of kelp to environmental parameters is crucial, especially in the context of environmental change that may have contributed to the decline of kelp forests all over the world. The current study presents the photosynthetic characteristics of the macroscopic sporophyte and microscopic gametophyte stages of the brown alga Alaria crassifolia from Hokkaido, Japan, as determined by examining their photosynthetic responses over a range of temperature and irradiance using dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. Net photosynthetic rates of the sporophyte were consistently higher than those of gametophyte across temperature gradients and irradiance levels. Photosynthesis–irradiance curves at 8°C, 16°C, and 20°C revealed similar initial slopes (α = 0.4–0.9) on the two life history stages, but higher compensation (E c = 4–7 μmol photons m?2 s?1) and saturation irradiances (E k = 53–103 μmol photons m?2 s?1) for the sporophyte than for the gametophyte (E c = 0–7 μmol photons m?2 s?1; E k = 7–10 μmol photons m?2 s?1). Both stages exhibited chronic photoinhibition, as shown by the failure of recovery in their maximum quantum yields (F v/F m) following high irradiance stress, with greater possibility of photodamage at low temperature. Gametophytes were less sensitive to low temperatures than sporophytes, given their relatively stable F v/F m response. Nevertheless, temperature optima for photosynthesis of both stages coincide with each other at 20–23°C, which correspond to the growth and maturation periods of A. crassifolia in Japan. This species is also likely to suffer from thermal inhibition as both GP rates and F v/F m decreased above 24°C.  相似文献   

12.
High-light effects on CO2 fixation gradients across leaves   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Chlorophyll fluorescence and internal patterns of 14CO2 fixation were measured in sun and shade leaves of spinach after treatment with various light intensities. When sun leaves were irradiated with 2000μmol m?2 s?1 for 2h, FV/FM decreased by about 15%, but 14CO2 fixation was unaffected, whereas shade leaves exhibited a 21% decrease in Fv/FM and a 25% decrease in 14CO2 fixation. Irradiation of sun and shade leaves with 4000μmol m?1 for 4 h decreased FV/FM by 30% in sun leaves and 40% in shade leaves, while total 14CO2 fixation decreased by 41% in sun leaves and 55% in shade leaves. After light treatment, gradients of CO2 fixation across leaves were determined by measuring 14CO2 fixed in paradermal leaf sections after a 10s pulse of 14CO2. Gradients of 14CO2 fixation in control sun and shade leaves were identified when expressed on a relative basis and normalized for leaf depth. Treatment of leaves with 2000 μmol PAR m?2 s?1 for 2h did not after patterns of carbon fixation across sun leaves, but slightly altered the pattern in shade leaves. In contrast, treatment of sun and shade leaves with 4000μmol m?2 s?1 for 4h decreased carbon fixation more in the palisade mesophyll cells than in the spongy mesophyll cells of sun and shade leaves, and fixation in medial tissue of shade leaves was dramatically decreased compared to the adaxial and abaxial tissue. The interaction between leaf anatomy and biochemical parameters involved in tolerance to photoinhibition in spinach is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Prior work demonstrated that Heuchera americana, an evergreen herb inhabiting the deciduous forest understory in the southeastern United States, has a 3-4-fold greater photosynthetic capacity under the low-temperature, strong-light, open canopies of winter compared to the high-temperature, weak-light, closed canopies of summer. Moreover, despite the reductions in soil nitrogen, the chilling temperatures, and the increased quantum flux associated with winter, chronic photoinhibition was not observed in this species at this time of the year. We were interested in the photosynthetic acclimation and photoinhibition characteristics of this species when grown under contrasting light and nitrogen regimes. Newly expanded shade-acclimated leaves of forest-grown plants exposed to strong light varying in intensity and duration at 25°C showed a reduction in Fv/Fm (the ratio of variable to maximum room temperature chlorophyll fluorescence measured after dark adaptation), which was correlated with a decline in øa (the intrinsic quantum yield of CO2-saturated O2 evolution on an absorbed light basis). Plants grown in the glasshouse under contrasting light (high and low light; HL and LL, respectively) and nitrogen supply (high and low nitrogen; HN and LN, respectively) regimes showed that photosynthetic acclimation to HL was impaired in LN regimes. The HL-LN plants also had the lowest values of Fv/Fm and of ø on both incident and absorbed light bases and had 50% less chlorophyll (per unit area) compared to plants from other growth regimes. Controlled exposure to bright light at low temperatures (2-3°C) for 3 h resulted in a sharp decrease in Fv/Fm (and rise in Fo, the minimum fluorescence yield) in all plants. Shade-grown plants from both N regimes were highly susceptible to chronic photoinhibition, as indicated by a greater reduction in Fv/Fm and incomplete recovery after 18 h in weak light at 25°C. The HL-HN plants were the least susceptible to chronic photoinhibition, having the smallest decrease in Fv/Fm with near full recovery within 6 h. The decline in Fv/Fm in HL-LN plants was comparable to that of shade-acclimated plants, but recovered fully within 6 h. Low-N plants from both light regimes displayed greater increases in Fo which did not return to pretreatment levels after 18 h of recovery. These studies indicate that HL-LN plants were sensitive to chronic photoinhibition and, at the same time, had a high capacity for dynamic photoinhibition. Experimental garden studies showed that H. americana grown in an open field in summer were photoinhibited and did not fully recover overnight or during extended periods of weak light. These results are discussed in relation to the photosynthetic acclimation of H. americana under natural conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Sun and shade leaves of several plant species from a neotropical forest were exposed to excessive light to evaluate the responses of photosystem I in comparison to those of photosystem II. Potential photosystem I activity was determined by means of the maximum P700 absorbance change around 810 nm (ΔA810max) in saturating far-red light. Leaf absorbance changes in dependence of increasing far-red light fluence rates were used to calculate a ‘saturation constant’, Ks, representing the far-red irradiance at which half of the maximal absorbance change (ΔA810max/2) was reached in the steady state. Photosystem II efficiency was assessed by measuring the ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll fluorescence, Fv/Fm, in dark-adapted leaf samples. Strong illumination caused a high degree of photo-inhibition of photosystem II in all leaves, particularly in shade leaves. Exposure to 1800–2000 μ mol photons m2 s1 for 75 min did not substantially affect the potential activity of photosystem I in all species tested, but caused a more than 40-fold increase of Ks in shade leaves, and a three-fold increase of Ks in sun leaves. The increase in Ks was reversible during recovery under low light, and the recovery process was much faster in sun than in shade leaves. The novel effect of high-light stress on the light saturation of P700 oxidation described here may represent a complex reversible mechanism within photosystem I that regulates light-energy dissipation and thus protects photosystem I from photo-oxidative damage. Moreover, we show that under high-light stress a high proportion of P700 accumulates in the oxidized state, P700+. Presumably, conversion of excitation energy to heat by this cation radical may efficiently contribute to photoprotection.  相似文献   

15.
Recovery from 60 min of photoinhibitory treatment at photosynthetic photon flux densities of 500, 1400 and 2200 μMmol m?2 s? was followed in cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown at 125 μMmol m?2 s?1. These light treatments represent photoregulation, moderate photoinhibition and strong photoinhibition, respectively. Treatment in photoregulatory light resulted in an increased maximal rate of oxygen evolution (Pmax) and an increased quantum yield (Φ), but a 15% decrease in Fv/FM. Treatment at moderately photoinhibitory light resulted in a 30% decrease in Fv/FM and an approximately equal decrease in Φ. Recovery in dim light restored Fv/FM within 15 and 45 min after high light treatment at 500 and 1400 μMmol m?2 s?1, respectively. Convexity (Θ), a measure of the extent of co-limitation between PS II turnover and whole-chain electron transport, and Φ approached, but did not reach the control level during recovery after exposure to 1400 μMmol m?2 s?1, whereas Pmax increased above the control. Treatment at 2200 μMmol m?2 s?1 resulted in a strong reduction of the modeled parameters Φ, Θ and Pmax. Subsequent recovery was initially rapid but the rate decreased, and a complete recovery was not reached within 120 min. Based on the results, it is hypothesized that exposure to high light results in two phenomena. The first, expressed at all three light intensities, involves redistribution within the different aspects of PS II heterogeneity rather than a photoinhibitory destruction of PS II reaction centers. The second, most strongly expressed at 2200 μmol m?2 s?1, is a physical damage to PS II shown as an almost total loss of PS IIα and PS II QB-reducing centers. Thus recovery displayed two phase, the first was rapid and the only visible phase in algae exposed to 500 and 1400 μmol m?2 s?1. The second phase was slow and visible only in the later part of recovery in cells exposed to 2200 μmol m?2 s?1.  相似文献   

16.
To evaluate the in situ occurrence of phytoplankton photoinhibition, the light-mediated depression of chlorophyll in vivo fluorescence (IVF) and of the cellular fluorescence capacity (CFC) of phytoplankton was determined in three southeastern United States reservoirs. Vertical profiles of a fluorescence depression index (FDI) and of the CFC for reservoir phytoplankton showed that near-surface photoinhibition of fluorescence properties occurred in association with high surface irradiance and weak vertical mixing of the water column. To characterize the time scales of photochemical and photosynthetic responses to and recovery from exposure to supraoptimal light intensity, phytoplankton IVF responses and 14C-fixation rates were measured infield experiments. Phytoplankton chlorophyll IVF, CFC, and photosynthetic 14C fixation were rapidly (20–40 min) depressed when reservoir phytoplankton were exposed to surface irradiances (1700–2000 μE·m?2·s?1). Light-mediated increases in the FDI declined rapidly (20–40 min) to pre-exposure levels during a subsequent low-light (75–200 μE·m?2·s?1) period, but CFC and 14C fixation recovered more slowly (>40 min). Exposure of reservoir phytoplankton to a light-intensity gradient revealed both intensity and time thresholds for IVF and CFC depression. Phytoplankton photochemical responses to bright light operate on time scales that, in conjunction with vertical mixing, should limit the occurrence of photoinhibition to extreme irradiance environments. Our results support the hypothesis that the photoinhibition of phytoplankton productivity occurs less commonly than is indicated by fixed-depth incubation measurements.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of light treatment (2000 micromole photons per square meter per second) for varying periods (up to 60 minutes) on chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics and light-limited rates of O2 evolution were examined in two Porphyra species. Brief light exposures (5-60 seconds) produced a large decrease in variable fluorescence which was not accompained by photoinhibition of light-limited O2 evolution rates. This rapid decrease in variable fluorescence was suppressed by carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, indicating that it was related to formation of a proton gradient across the thylakiod membranes. A second phase of fluorescence quenching started after 5 minutes of illumination in the case of the shade species, Porphyra nereocystis Anderson, and after 30 minutes of illumination in the case of the sun species, Porphyra perforata J. Agardh. The rate of fluorescence quenching in the second phase was similar to the rate of photoinhibition of light-limited O2 evolution in both cases. The dark recovery of variable fluorescence in light-treated plants was also biphasic consisting of a rapid first phase and a slower second phase in both the Porphyra species. Recovery of P. perforata was more complete than that of P. nereocystis over the same recovery period. This greater capacity for recovery could represent a mechanism by which P. perforata is more resistant to photoinhibition than P. nereocystis.  相似文献   

18.
Responses of leaf and shoot hydraulic conductance to light quality were examined on shoots of silver birch (Betula pendula), cut from lower (‘shade position’) and upper thirds of the crowns (‘sun position’) of trees growing in a natural temperate forest stand. Hydraulic conductances of leaf blades (Klb), petioles (KP) and branches (i.e. leafless stem; KB) were determined using a high pressure flow meter in steady state mode. The shoots were exposed to photosynthetic photon flux density of 200–250 µmol m?2 s?1 using white, blue or red light. Klb depended significantly on both light quality and canopy position (P < 0.001), KB on canopy position (P < 0.001) and exposure time (P = 0.014), and none of the three factors had effect on KP. The highest values of Klb were recorded under the blue light (3.63 and 3.13 × 10?4 kg m?2 MPa?1 s?1 for the sun and shade leaves, respectively), intermediate values under white light (3.37 and 2.46 × 10?4 kg m?2 MPa?1 s?1, respectively) and lowest values under red light (2.83 and 2.02 × 10?4 kg m?2 MPa?1 s?1, respectively). Light quality has an important impact on leaf hydraulic properties, independently of light intensity or of total light energy, and the specific light receptors involved in this response require identification. Given that natural canopy shade depletes blue and red light, Klb may be decreased both by reduced fluence and shifts in light spectra, indicating the need for studies of the natural heterogeneity of Klb within and under canopies, and its impacts on gas exchange.  相似文献   

19.
We determined the effect of irradiance and temperature on the photosynthesis of two heteromorphic life‐history stages of an endangered freshwater red alga, Thorea gaudichaudii (Thoreales) by laboratory and field measurements. Net oxygenic photosynthesis–irradiance models of macroscopic and microscopic life‐history stages revealed similar low irradiance‐adapted responses, with a compensation irradiance (Ec) of 6.71 and 2.56 μmol photons m?2 s?1 (4.30–9.13 and 0.13–7.19, 95% Bayesian prediction interval, BPI) and saturating irradiance (Ek) of 26.6 and 30.0 μmol photons m?2 s?1 (19.0–37.4 and 12.1–63.0, BPI), respectively. A temperature‐dependent model of net photosynthesis and dark respiration in macroscopic and microscopic stages also showed similar temperature responses, and the gross photosynthetic rate (GPmax), 3.54 and 6.34 μg O2 gww?1 min?1 (3.10–3.99 and 5.31–8.21, BPI), was highest at 32.1 and 35.7°C (29.8–34.0 and 29.5–48.6, BPI). The maximum quantum yields (F v/F m) in macroscopic and microscopic stages were also similar in response with respect to temperature; however, it was somewhat steady at low temperatures with the highest value of 0.54 and 0.62 (0.54–0.55 and 0.61–0.63, BPI) at 17.8 and 15.0°C (16.7–18.8 and 12.3–17.1, BPI). The effective quantum yield (Φ PSII) in macroscopic and microscopic stages was also negatively correlated with irradiance, which decreased after 12 h of continuous exposure to 50 (low) and 1000 (high) μmol photons m?2 s?1 at 12 and 22°C. Large declines of Φ PSII and subsequent failure of F v/F m recovery were particularly enhanced at high irradiance, signifying photoinhibition. Diurnal change of Φ PSII and incident irradiance of the macroscopic stage under the field measurement revealed the midday depression of Φ PSII; however, there was little direct sunlight due to shading by the trees, and algae were occurring in the shaded locations in the freshwater spring.  相似文献   

20.
We characterized the photoautotrophic growth of glucose‐tolerant Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 in a flat‐panel photobioreactor running on a semicontinuous regime under various lights, temperatures, and influx carbon dioxide concentrations. The maximum reached growth rate was 0.135 h?1, which corresponds to a doubling time of 5.13 h—a growth speed never reported for Synechocystis before. Saturating red light intensity for the strain was 220–360 μmol(photons) m?2 s?1, and we did not observe any photoinhibition up to 660 μmol(photons) m?2 s?1. Synechocystis was able to grow under red light only; however, photons of wavelengths 405–585 and 670–700 nm further improved its growth. Optimal growth temperature was 35°C. Below 32°C, the growth rates decreased linearly with temperature coefficient (Q10) 1.70. Semicontinuous cultivation is known to be efficient for growth characterization and optimization. However, the assumption of correct growth rates calculation—culture exponential growth—is often not fulfilled. The semicontinuous setup in this study was operated as a turbidostat. Accurate online OD measurements with high time‐resolution allowed fast and reliable growth rates determination. Repeating diluting frequencies (up to 18 dilutions per day) were essential for rapid growth stability evaluation. The presented setup provides improvement to previously published semicontinuous characterization strategies by decreasing experimental time requirements and maintaining the culture in exponential growth phase throughout the entire characterization procedure.  相似文献   

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