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1.
The effect of long-term exposure to elevated levels of CO2 on biomass partitioning, net photosynthesis and starch metabolism was examined in cotton. Plants were grown under controlled conditions at 350, 675 and 1000 l l-1 CO2. Plants grown at 675 and 1000 l l-1 had 72% and 115% more dry weight respectively than plants grown at 350 l l-1. Increases in weight were partially due to corresponding increases in leaf starch. CO2 enrichment also caused a decrease in chlorophyll concentration and a change in the chlorophyll a/b ratio. High CO2 grown plants had lower photosynthetic capacity than 350 l l-1 grown plants when measured at each CO2 concentration. Reduced photosynthetic rates were correlated with high internal (non-stomatal) resistances and higher starch levels. It is suggested that carbohydrate accumulation causes a decline in photosynthesis by feedback inhibition and/or physical damage at the chloroplast level.Abbreviations Ci internal CO2 concentration - Chl chlorophyll - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - HSD honestly significant difference (procedure) - MCW methanolchloroform-water - Pi inorganic phosphate - S.E.M. standard error of mean  相似文献   

2.
Dry weight and Relative Growth Rate of Lemna gibba were significantly increased by CO2 enrichment up to 6000 l CO2 l–1. This high CO2 optimum for growth is probably due to the presence of nonfunctional stomata. The response to high CO2 was less or absent following four days growth in 2% O2. The Leaf Area Ratio decreased in response to CO2 enrichment as a result of an increase in dry weight per frond. Photosynthetic rate was increased by CO2 enrichment up to 1500 l CO2 l–1 during measurement, showing only small increases with further CO2 enrichment up to 5000 l CO2 l–1 at a photon flux density of 210 mol m–2 s–1 and small decreases at 2000 mol m–1 s–1. The actual rate of photosynthesis of those plants cultivated at high CO2 levels, however, was less than the air grown plants. The response of photosynthesis to O2 indicated that the enhancement of growth and photosynthesis by CO2 enrichment was a result of decreased photorespiration. Plants cultivated in low O2 produced abnormal morphological features and after a short time showed a reduction in growth.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of environmental conditions on isoprene emission from live oak   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Live-oak plants (Quercus virginiana Mill.) were subjected to various levels of CO2, water stress or photosynthetic photon flux density to test the hypothesis that isoprene biosynthesis occurred only under conditions of restricted CO2 availability. Isoprene emission increases as the ambient CO2 concentration decreased, independent of the amount of time that plants had photosynthesized at ambient CO2 levels. When plants were water-stressed over a 4-d period photosynthesis and leaf conductance decreased 98 and 94%, respectively, while isoprene emissions remained constant. Significant isoprene emissions occurred when plants were saturated with CO2, i.e., below the light compensation level for net photosynthesis (100 mol m-2 s-1). Isoprene emission rates increased with photosynthetic photon flux density and at 25 and 50 mol m-2 s-1 were 7 and 18 times greater than emissions in the dark. These data indicate that isoprene is a normal plant metabolite and not — as has been suggested — formed exclusively in response to restricted CO2 or various stresses.Abbreviation PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density  相似文献   

4.
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6.
Carbonic anhydrase activity of intactCommelina communis L. leaves was measured using mass spectrometry, by following the18O-exchange kinetics between18O-enriched carbon dioxide and water. A gas-diffusion model (Gerster, 1971, Planta97, 155–172) was used to interpret the18O-exchange kinetics and to determine two constants, one (k) related to the hydration of CO2 and the other (ke), related to the diffusion of CO2. Both constants were determined inCommelina communis L. leaves after stripping the lower epidermis to remove any stomatal influence. The hydration constant (k) was 17200 +2200 ·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments), i.e., about 8 600 times the uncatalyzed hydration of CO2 in pure water, and was specifically inhibited by ethoxyzolamide, a powerful inhibitor of carbonic anhydrases, half-inhibition occurring around 10–5 Methoxyzolamide. The diffusion constant (ke) was 1.18±0.28·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments) and was only slightly inhibited (about 20%) by ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity of stripped leaves was not affected by the leaf water status (up to 50% relative water deficits), was strongly inhibited by monovalent anions such as Cl or NO 3 , and decreased by about 50% when the photon flux density during growth was increased from 100 to 500 mol photons·m–2·s–1. By studying the effect of ethoxyzolamide (10–4 M) on photosynthetic O2 exchange, measured using18O2 and mass spectrometry, we found that inhibition of carbonic anhydrase activity by 92–95% had little effect on the response curves of net O2 evolution to increased CO2 concentrations. Ethoxyzolamide had no effect on the photosynthetic electron-transport rate, measured as gross O2 photosynthesis at high CO2 concentration (>350 l·–1), but was found to increase both gross O2 photosynthesis and O2 uptake at lower CO2 levels. The chloroplastic CO2 concentration calculated from O2-exchange data was not significantly modified by ethoxyzolamide. We conclude from these results that, under normal conditions of photosynthesis, most of the carbonic anhydrase activity is not involved in CO2 assimilation. Measurement of carbonic anhydrase activity using18O-isotope exchange therefore provides a suitable model to study the in-vivo regulation of this chloroplastic enzyme in plants submitted to various environmental conditions.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - Ccc chloroplastic CO2 concentration - Ce external CO2 concentration - EZA ethoxyzolamide - k CO2 hydration rate constant - ke CO2 diffusion rate constan - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - Rubisco ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - RWD relative water deficit The authors wish to thank P. Carrier for technical assistance with mass-spectrometric experiments and Dr. P. Thibault for helpful suggestions and comments. Dr. A. Vavasseur is gratefully acknowledged for supplyingCommelima communis. cultures. P.C., P.T. and A.V. are all from the CEA, Département de Physiologie Végétale et Ecosystèmes, Cadarache, France.  相似文献   

7.
Gas exchange and fluorescence measurements of attached leaves of water stressed bean, sunflower and maize plants were carried out at two light intensities (250 mol quanta m-2s-1 and 850 mol quanta m-2s-1). Besides the restriction of transpiration and CO2 uptake, the dissipation of excess light energy was clearly reflected in the light and dark reactions of photosynthesis under stress conditions. Bean and maize plants preferentially use non-photochemical quenching for light energy dissipation. In sunflower plants, excess light energy gave rise to photochemical quenching. Autoradiography of leaves after photosynthesis in 14CO2 demonstrated the occurrence of leaf patchiness in sunflower and maize but not in bean. The contribution of CO2 recycling within the leaves to energy dissipation was investigated by studies in 2.5% oxygen to suppress photorespiration. The participation of different energy dissipating mechanisms to quanta comsumption on agriculturally relevant species is discussed.Abbreviations Fo minimal fluorescence - Fm maximal fluorescence - Fp peak fluorescence - g leaf conductance - PN net CO2 uptake - qN coefficient of non-photochemical quenching - qP coefficient of photochemical quenching  相似文献   

8.
Transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. W38) with an antisense gene directed against the mRNA of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) small subunit was used to determine the kinetic properties of Rubisco in vivo. The leaves of these plants contained only 34% as much Rubisco as those of the wild type, but other photosynthetic components were not significantly affected. Consequently, the rate of CO2 assimilation by the antisense plants was limited by Rubisco activity over a wide range of CO2 partial pressures. Unlike in the wild-type leaves, where the rate of regeneration of ribulose bisphosphate limited CO2 assimilation at intercellular partial pressures above 400 ubar, photosynthesis in the leaves of the antisense plants responded hyperbolically to CO2, allowing the kinetic parameters of Rubisco in vivo to be inferred. We calculated a maximal catalytic turnover rate, kcat, of 3.5+0.2 mol CO2·(mol sites)–1·s–1 at 25° C in vivo. By comparison, we measured a value of 2.9 mol CO2·(mol sites)–1·–1 in vitro with leaf extracts. To estimate the Michaelis-Menten constants for CO2 and O2, the rate of CO2 assimilation was measured at 25° C at different intercellular partial pressures of CO2 and O2. These measurements were combined with carbon-isotope analysis (13C/12C) of CO2 in the air passing over the leaf to estimate the conductance for transfer of CO2 from the substomatal cavities to the sites of carboxylation (0.3 mol·m–2·s–1·bar–1) and thus the partial pressure of CO2 at the sites of carboxylation. The calculated Michaelis-Menten constants for CO2 and O2 were 259 ±57 bar (8.6±1.9M) and 179 mbar (226 M), respectively, and the effective Michaelis-Menten constant for CO2 in 200 mbar O2 was 549 bar (18.3 M). From measurements of the photocompensation point (* = 38.6 ubar) we estimated Rubisco's relative specificity for CO2, as opposed to O2 to be 97.5 in vivo. These values were dependent on the size of the estimated CO2-transfer conductance.Abbreviations and Symbols A CO2-assimilation rate - gw conductance for CO2 transfer from the substomatal cavities to the sites of carboxylation - Kc, Ko Michaelis-Menten constants for carboxylation, oxygenation of Rubisco - kcat Vcmax/[active site] - O partial pressure of O2 at the site of carboxylation - pc partial pressure of CO2 at the site of carboxylation - pi intercellular CO2 partial pressure - Rd day respiration (non-photorespiratory CO2 evolution) - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - Sc/o relative specificity factor for Rubisco - SSu small subunit of Rubisco - Vcmax, Vomax maximum rates of Rubisco carboxylation, oxygenation - * partial pressure of CO2 in the chloroplast at which photorespiratory CO2 evolution equals the rate of carboxylation  相似文献   

9.
Summary The effects of CO2 enrichment on the growth, biomass partitioning, photosynthetic rates, and leaf nitrogen concentration of a grass, Bromus mollis (C3), were investigated at a favorable and a low level of nitrogen availability. Despite increases in root: shoot ratios, leaf nitrogen concentrations were decreased under CO2 enrichment at both nitrogen levels. For the low-nitrogen treatment, this resulted in lower photosynthetic rates measured at 650 l/l for the CO2-enriched plants, compared to photosynthetic rates measured at 350 l/l for the non-enriched plants. At higher nitrogen availability, photosynthetic rates of plants grown and measured at 650 l/l were greater than photosynthetic rates of the non-enriched plants measured at 350 l/l. Water use efficiency, however, was increased in enriched plants at both nitrogen levels. CO2 enrichment stimulated vegetative growth at both high and low nitrogen during most of the vegetative growth phase but, at the end of the experiment, total biomass of the high and low CO2 treatments did not differ for plants grown at low nitrogen availability. While not statistically significant, CO2 tended to stimulate seed production at high nitrogen and to decrease it at low nitrogen.  相似文献   

10.
Seedlings of loblolly pine Pinus taeda (L.), were grown in open-topped field chambers under three CO2 regimes: ambient, 150 l l–1 CO2 above ambient, and 300 l l–1 CO2 above ambient. A fourth, non-chambered ambient treatment was included to assess chamber effects. Needles were used in 96 h feeding trials to determine the performance of young, second instar larvae of loblolly pine's principal leaf herbivore, red-headed pine sawfly, Neodiprion lecontei (Fitch). The relative consumption rate of larvae significantly increased on plants grown under elevated CO2, and needles grown in the highest CO2 regime were consumed 21% more rapidly than needles grown in ambient CO2. Both the significant decline in leaf nitrogen content and the substantial increase in leaf starch content contributed to a significant increase in the starch:nitrogen ratio in plants grown in elevated CO2. Insect consumption rate was negatively related to leaf nitrogen content and positively related to the starch:nitrogen ratio. Of the four volatile leaf monoterpenes measured, only -pinene exhibited a significant CO2 effect and declined in plants grown in elevated CO2. Although consumption changed, the relative growth rates of larvae were not different among CO2 treatments. Despite lower nitrogen consumption rates by larvae feeding on the plants grown in elevated CO2, nitrogen accumulation rates were the same for all treatments due to a significant increase in nitrogen utilization efficiency. The ability of this insect to respond at an early, potentially susceptible larval stage to poorer food quality and declining levels of a leaf monoterpene suggest that changes in needle quality within pines in future elevated-CO2 atmospheres may not especially affect young insects and that tree-feeding sawflies may respond in a manner similar to herb-feeding lepidopterans.  相似文献   

11.
Root proliferation into nutrient rich zones is an important mechanism in the exploitation of soil nutrients by plants. No studies have examined atmospheric CO2 effects on cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) root distribution as affected by localized phosphorus (P). Cotton plants were grown in a Troup sand (loamy, thermic Grossarenic Kandiudults) using 17.2-l containers placed in open top field chambers (OTC) under ambient (360 mol mol–1) or enriched (720 mol mol–1) atmospheric CO2 concentrations for 40 days. Equivalent amounts of P were added (150 mg P per kg of soil) to 100, 50, 25, 12.5, and 6.25% of the total soil volume; control containers with no added P were also included. Under extremely low P (controls), cotton was unresponsive to CO2 enrichment. In treatments with both fertilized and unfertilized soil volumes, root proliferation was greater in the unfertilized soil under elevated CO2 conditions. Stimulation of root growth occurred in the P-fertilized soil fraction; the pattern of stimulation was similar under both CO2 levels. Under ambient CO2, cotton plant response was positive (shoot mass, and total root mass and length) when soil P was confined to relatively small proportions of the total soil volume (6.25 and 12.5%). However, elevated CO2 grown plants tended to respond to P regardless of its distribution.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of extreme temperature events with future atmospheric CO2 concentrations may have strong impacts on physiological performance of desert shrub seedlings, which during the critical establishment phase often endure temperature extremes in conjunction with pronounced drought. To evaluate the interaction of drought and CO2 on photosynthesis during heat stress, one-year-old Larrea tridentata[DC] Cov. seedlings were exposed to nine days of heat with midday air temperature maxima reaching 53 °C under three atmospheric CO2 concentrations (360, 550 and 700 mol mol–1) and two water regimes (well-watered and droughted). Photosynthetic gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence and water potential responses were measured prior to, during and one week following the high temperature stress event. Heat stress markedly decreased net photosynthetic rate (A net), stomatal conductance (g s), and the photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (F v/F m) in all plants except for well-watered L. tridentata grown in 700 mol mol–1 CO2. A net and g s remained similar to pre-stress levels in these plants. In droughted L. tridentata, A net was ca. 2× (in 550 mol mol–1 CO2) to 3× (in 700 mol mol–1 CO2) higher than in ambient-CO2-grown plants, while g s and F v/F m were similar and low in all CO2 treatments. Following heat stress, g s in all well-watered plants rose dramatically, exceeding pre-stress levels by up to 100%. In droughted plants, g s and A net rose only in plants grown at elevated CO2 following release from heat. This recovery response was strongest at 700 mol mol–1 CO2, which returned to A net and g s values similar to pre-heat following several days of recovery. Extreme heat diminished the photosynthetic down-regulation response to growth at elevated CO2 under well-watered conditions, similar to the action of drought. Ambient-CO2-grown L. tridentata did not show significant recovery of photosynthetic capacity (A \max and CE) after alleviation of temperature stress, especially when exposed to drought, while plants exposed to elevated CO2 appeared to be unaffected. These findings suggest that elevated CO2 could promote photosynthetic activity during critical periods of seedling establishment, and enhance the potential for L. tridentata to survive extreme high temperature events.  相似文献   

13.
The direct and indirect effects of increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) on plant nitrogen (N) content were studied in a shortgrass steppe ecosystem in northeastern Colorado, USA. Beginning in 1997 nine experimental plots were established: three open-top chambers with ambient CO2 levels (approximately 365 mol mol–1), three open-top chambers with twice-ambient CO2 levels (approximately 720 mol mol–1), and three unchambered control plots. After 3 years of growing-season CO2 treatment, the aboveground N concentration of plants grown under elevated atmospheric CO2 decreased, and the carbon–nitrogen (C:N) ratio increased. At the same time, increased aboveground biomass production under elevated atmospheric CO2 conditions increased the net transfer of N out of the soil of elevated-CO2 plots. Aboveground biomass production after simulated herbivory was also greater under elevated CO2 compared to ambient CO2. Surprisingly, no significant changes in belowground plant tissue N content were detected in response to elevated CO2. Measurements of individual species at peak standing phytomass showed significant effects of CO2 treatment on aboveground plant tissue N concentration and significant differences between species in N concentration, suggesting that changes in species composition under elevated CO2 will contribute to overall changes in nutrient cycling. Changes in plant N content, driven by changes in aboveground plant N concentration, could have important consequences for biogeochemical cycling rates and the long-term productivity of the shortgrass steppe as atmospheric CO2 concentrations increase.  相似文献   

14.
S. C. Wong 《Oecologia》1979,44(1):68-74
Summary Cotton and maize plants were grown under full sunlight in glass houses containing normal ambient partial pressure of CO2 (330±20 bar) and enriched partial pressure of CO2 (640 ±15 bar) with four levels of nitrogen nutrient. In 40 day old cotton plants grown in high CO2, there was a 2-fold increase in day weight and a 1.6-fold increase in leaf area compared with plants grown in ambient CO2. In 30 day old maize plants there was only 20% increase in dry weight in plants grown in 640 bar CO2 compared with plants grown in 330 bar and no significant increase in leaf area. In both species, at both CO2 treatments, dry weight and leaf area decreased in similar proportion with decreased nitrogen nutrient.The increase of leaf area in cotton plants at high CO2 caused a reduction of total nitrogen on a dry weight basis. In cotton assimilation rate increased 1.5 fold when plants were grown with high nitrogen and high CO2. The increase was less at lower levels of nitrate nutrient. There was a 1.2 fold increase in assimilation rate in maize grown at high CO2 with high nitrate nutrient.Cotton and maize grown in high CO2 had a lower assimilation rate in ambient CO2 compared to plants grown in normal ambient air. This difference was due to the reduction in RuBP carboxylase activity. Water use efficiency was doubled in both cotton and maize plants grown at high CO2 in all nutrient treatments. However, this increase in water use efficiency was due primarily to reduced transpiration in some treatments and to increased assimilation in others. These data show that plant responses to elevated atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 depend on complex of partially compensatory processes which are not readily predictable.  相似文献   

15.
The growth and photosynthetic responses ofPterocladiella capillaceato NH4, PO4, CO2-enrichment, pH, irradiance and temperature were evaluated for winter or summer plants cultivated under laboratory and outdoor settings. In the laboratory, using a gradient table, optimal growth temperature and irradiance for winter plants occurred at 10–20 °C and 100 mol photon m–2s–1, averaging 24.3% per week. The optimal growth conditions found for summer plants were 10–20 °C and 20 mol photon m–2s–1, averaging 29.0% per week. In a pH-stat cultivation system photosynthetic rates and growth rates were largely unaffected by pH in the range 6.5–8.5, however, they both decreased significantly above 8.5. In outdoor settings, using 40 L tanks,P. capillaceawas more responsive to the frequency the algae were fed with NH4and PO4rather than the relative concentrations of these nutrients. The average growth rates during winter were 28.3% and 12.5% per week when NH4and PO4were included once and twice a week for 24-h periods, respectively, while summer plants grew 15.0% and 25.3% per week at these nutrient regimes. Algae grown in seawater (containing 13.8 ± 1.8 M CO2) or CO2-enriched seawater (averaging 33.7 ± 13.2 M CO2) had similar growth rates or even reduced productivity under CO2-enrichment during winter. Concentrations of chlorophyllawere in average significantly higher in winter as compared to summer especially when nutrients were included twice a week. Phycoerythrin levels were also higher for plants fed with nutrients twice a week particularly during summer time. Although agar yields were limited and not seasonally dependent, this study shows high growth capacity forP. capillaceaas compared to previous investigations. Future mariculture prospective using current tank cultivation techniques for this species will likely depend on market demands for high quality agar.  相似文献   

16.
Chlorophyll fluorescence, light scattering, the electrochromic shift P515 and levels of some photosynthetic intermediates were measured in illuminated leaves. Oxygen and CO2 concentrations in the gas phase were varied in order to obtain information on control of Photosystem II activity under conditions such as produced by water stress, when stomatal closure restricts access of CO2 to the photosynthetic apparatus. Light scattering and energy-dependent fluorescence quenching indicated a high level of chloroplast energization under high intensity illumination even when linear electron transport was curtailed in CO2-free air or in 1% oxygen with 35 ll-1 CO2. Calculations of the phosphorylation potential based on measurements of phosphoglycerate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate and NADP revealed ratios of intrathylakoid to extrathylakoid proton concentrations, which were only somewhat higher in air containing 35 l l-1 CO2 than in CO2-free air or 1% oxygen/35 l l-1 CO2. Anaerobic conditions prevented appreciable chloroplast energization. Acceptor-limitation of electron flow resulted in a high reduction level of the electron transport chain, which is characterized by decreased oxidation of P700, not only under anaerobic conditions, but also in air, when CO2 was absent, and in 1% oxygen, when the CO2 concentration was reduced to 35 ll-1. Efficient control of electron transport was indicated by the photoaccumulation of P700 + at or close to the CO2 compensation point in air. It is proposed to require the interplay between photorespiratory and photosynthetic electron flows, electron flow to oxygen and cyclic electron flow. The field-indicating electrochromic shift (P515) measured as a rapid absorption decrease on switching the light off followed closely the extent of photoaccumulation of P700 + in the light.Abbreviations F, F0, F0, FM, FM chlorophyll fluorescence levels - GA glyceraldehyde - P515 field indicating rapid absorption change peaking at 522 nm - QA primary quinone acceptor in Photosystem II - QN non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - Qq photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

17.
Past studies of the effects of varying levels of photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) on the morphology and physiology of the epiphytic Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant Tillandsia usneoides L. (Bromeliaceae) have resulted in two important findings: (1) CAM, measured as integrated nocturnal CO2 uptake or as nocturnal increases in tissue acidity, saturates at relatively low PPFD, and (2) this plant does not acclimate to different PPFD levels, these findings require substantiation using photosynthetic responses immediately attributable to different PPFD levels, e.g., O2 evolution, as opposed to the delayed, nocturnal responses (CO2 uptake and acid accumulation). In the present study, instantaneous responses of O2 evolution to PPFD level were measured using plants grown eight weeks at three PPFD (20–45, 200–350, and 750–800 mol m-2s-1) in a growth chamber, and using shoots taken from the exposed upper portions (maximum PPFD of 800 mol m-2s-1) and shaded lower portions (maximum PPFD of 140 mol m-2s-1) of plants grown ten years in a greenhouse. In addition, nocturnal increases in acidity were measured in the growth chamber plants. Regardless of the PPFD levels during growth, O2 evolution rates saturated around 500 mol m-2s-1. Furthermore, nocturnal increases in tissue acidity saturated at much lower PPFD. Thus, previous results were confirmed: photosynthesis saturated at low PPFD, and this epiphyte does not acclimate to different levels of PPFD.Abbreviations ANOVA analysis of variance - CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - DW dry weight - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - SNK Student-Newman-Keuls (to whom all correspondence should be sent-present address and reprint requests);  相似文献   

18.
Temperature-dependent feedback inhibition of photosynthesis in peanut   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Arachis hypogaea L. is a tropical crop that is slow-growing at temperatures below 25°C. Unadapted CO2-assimilation rate (A) showed insufficient variation between 15 and 30°C in the short term (hours) to explain this marked reduction in growth. However, at longer periods (12 d), A was depressed as were growth rate and leafproduction rate. To examine the possible relationship between growth, A and sink demand plants were transferred from 30°C, which is near the optimum for growth, to a suboptimal temperature (19°C). In the first 2 d of cooling, A decreased by 50–70%, the stomata stayed open, and the intercellular CO2 concentration (ci) rose, i.e. the decrease in A of the cooled plants was the result of non-stomatal factors. Changes in dark respiration did not account for the decline in A.Clear evidence was obtained of sink control of A by independently manipulating the temperature of different leaves on the plant. Cooling (to 19°C) most of the plant (the sink) led to a 70% decline in A of the remaining leaves at 30°C after 3 d, whereas the converse treatments (30°C sink, 19°C source) resulted in small changes (17%). In plants at 19°C which were exposed to low CO2 concentration to prevent photosynthesis, A was not reduced when measured at normal CO2 concentrations, indicating that carbohydrate accumulation was responsible for the decline in A. Dry-matter build-up at suboptimal temperature was also consistent with end-product inhibition of photosynthesis.Abbreviations and symbols A (mol·m-2·s-1) rate of net CO2 assimilation - Ci (l·l-1) substomatal CO2 concentration - DW (g) dry weight - g (mol·m-2·s-1) stomatal conductance to diffusion of water vapour - PFD (mol·m-2·s-1) photon flux density  相似文献   

19.
Data for the maximum carboxylation velocity of ribulose-1,5-biosphosphate carboxylase, Vm, and the maximum rate of whole-chain electron transport, Jm, were calculated according to a photosynthesis model from the CO2 response and the light response of CO2 uptake measured on ears of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Arkas), oat (Avena sativa L. cv. Lorenz), and barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Aramir). The ratio Jm/Vm is lower in glumes of oat and awns of barley than it is in the bracts of wheat and in the lemmas and paleae of oat and barley. Light-microscopy studies revealed, in glumes and lemmas of wheat and in the lemmas of oat and barley, a second type of photosynthesizing cell which, in analogy to the Kranz anatomy of C4 plants, can be designated as a bundle-sheath cell. In wheat ears, the CO2-compensation point (in the absence of dissimilative respiration) is between those that are typical for C3 and C4 plants.A model of the CO2 uptake in C3–C4 intermediate plants proposed by Peisker (1986, Plant Cell Environ. 9, 627–635) is applied to recalculate the initial slopes of the A(pc) curves (net photosynthesis rate versus intercellular partial pressure of CO2) under the assumptions that the Jm/Vm ratio for all organs investigated equals the value found in glumes of oat and awns of barley, and that ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase is redistributed from mesophyll to bundle-sheath cells. The results closely match the measured values. As a consequence, all bracts of wheat ears and the inner bracts of oat and barley ears are likely to represent a C3–C4 intermediate type, while glumes of oat and awns of barley represent the C3 type.Abbreviations A net photosynthesis rate (mol·m-2·s-1) - Jm maximum rate of whole-chain electron transport (mol·e-·m-2·s-1) - pc (bar) intercellular partial pressure of CO2 - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density (mol quanta·m-2·s-1) - RuBPCase ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - Vm maximum carboxylation velocity of RuBPCase (mol·m-2·s-1) - T* CO2 compensation point in the absence of dissimilative respiration (bar)  相似文献   

20.
Plants often respond to elevated atmospheric CO2 levels with reduced tissue nitrogen concentrations relative to ambient CO2-grown plants when comparisons are made at a common time. Another common response to enriched CO2 atmospheres is an acceleration in plant growth rates. Because plant nitrogen concentrations are often highest in seedlings and subsequently decrease during growth, comparisons between ambient and elevated CO2-grown plants made at a common time may not demonstrate CO2-induced reductions in plant nitrogen concentration per se. Rather, this comparison may be highlighting differences in nitrogen concentration between bigger, more developed plants and smaller, less developed plants. In this study, we directly examined whether elevated CO2 environments reduce plant nitrogen concentrations independent of changes in plant growth rates. We grew two annual plant species. Abutilon theophrasti (C3 photosynthetic pathway) and Amaranthus retroflexus (C4 photosynthetic pathway), from seed in glass-sided growth chambers with atmospheric CO2 levels of 350 mol·mol–1 or 700 mol·mol–1 and with high or low fertilizer applications. Individual plants were harvested every 2 days starting 3 days after germination to determine plant biomass and nitrogen concentration. We found: 1. High CO2-grown plants had reduced nitrogen concentrations and increased biomass relative to ambient CO2-grown plants when compared at a common time; 2. Tissue nitrogen concentrations did not vary as a function of CO2 level when plants were compared at a common size; and 3. The rate of biomass accumulation per rate of increase in plant nitrogen was unaffected by CO2 availability, but was altered by nutrient availability. These results indicate that a CO2-induced reduction in plant nitrogen concentration may not be due to physiological changes in plant nitrogen use efficiency, but is probably a size-dependent phenomenon resulting from accelerated plant growth.  相似文献   

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