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1.
The patterns of diurnal variations in pigmentation and optical cross-section were compared for two cyclostat cultures of Chlorella pyrenoidosa, where the dynamics of the photoperiod differed. Populations were light-limited, nutrient rich and growing on an 8:16 light-dark (LD) cycle. One light regime was an 8 h sine function of the light period (sinusoidal culture), while the second had an 1 h sine function super-imposed on the 8 hour sine function (oscillating sinusoidal culture). Hourly samples were taken throughout a 12 h period including the light period. Determinations were made of chlorophyll (Chl) a and b abundance, in vivo absorption spectra, cell number and volume and used to derive both cell-specific (cell) and optical chlorophyll specific (chl) cross sections, as well as the absorption efficiency, Q, of the cells. The results indicate that C. pyrenoidosa is capable of adapting to dynamics in light intensity within an 8 h photoperiod. The sinusoidal culture showed a constant decrease in the Chl a/b ratio of 28% while the total Chl content per cell increased slightly and chl and Q remained constant, suggesting coordinated changes in reaction centers and light harvesting complexes. Over the oscillating photoperiod, however, the second culture displayed a diurnal variation in Chl a/b ratio, a 20% increase in chl and an apparent oscillation in Q. These observations suggest that an oscillating photoperiod promoted the capability of Chl molecules to collect light and that the fractional area of all Chl molecules exposed to the photon flux is inversely related to the photon flux.  相似文献   

2.
Growth and photosynthetic characteristics, P max (maximum light-saturated oxygen production rate) and (photosynthetic affinity), of Microcystis aeruginosa were studied in continuous cultures under a range of photoperiod lengths and growth irradiances. Microcystis showed a low specific maintenance rate constant and a high growth affinity for light (typical cyanobacterial features), but required a dark period to obtain maximum growth rate. P max and per unit dry weight increased, as did pigment content, when less light became available. By regulation in and P max (crucial in light-limiting and high-light conditions, respectively) this buoyant species can flourish in low light, but also in high-light environments which may arise when buoyancy is lost.The two different types of light conditions affected growth, and photosynthesis, in different ways. One needs thus to discriminate between photoperiod- and irradiance-limitation, which restricts the utility of simple algal growth models. It was emphasized that photosynthetic adaptation patterns of light-limited species may resemble short-term nutrient uptake kinetics of nutrient-limited organisms.With prior knowledge of the growth limitation, we were able to assess the growth rate of a natural population of Microcystis from its photosynthetic response and from data of laboratory cultures of a known physiological state.  相似文献   

3.
Chlorella pyrenoidosa was grown in three continuous cultures each receiving a different light regime during the light period of a diurnal cycle. Hourly samples taken during the light period were subjected to medium frequency light/dark oscillations of equal duration, ranging from 3 to 240 seconds. The oxygen consumption and production of each sample were measured with an oxygen electrode in a small oxygen chamber. Although the light/dark cycles had little overall influence on photosynthetic activity, the microalgae appeared to adapt to the light regime to which they were subjected. Large differences were found between the maximum chlorophyll-specific production rates (P infmax supB ), the chlorophyll-specific production rates (PB) and the respiration rates between the cultures and treated subsamples. Respiration rates increased during the light period, whilst PB either increased, or had a mid light period minimum or maximum. The culture which received an hourly light oscillation during the light period had the highest P infmax supB and lowest respiration rates, and it is suggested that these algae react as in nature, whereas either a sinusoidal or a block light pattern is unnatural. The latter light regime is commonly used in laboratory studies.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The photosynthetic characteristics for the intertidal macroalga Ascophyllum nodosum were examined in air and water. Under ambient conditions of temperature (10° C) inorganic carbon concentrations (15.63 mmol CO2 m-3 or 2.0 mol TIC m-3) and light (500 mol photons m-2 s-1) photosynthesis was slightly greater by the exposed alga than by the submerged alga. In both environments photosynthesis was light saturated at 200 mol photons m-2 s-1. The relationship between CO2 concentration and photosynthesis in air could be accurately analysed using Michaelis-Menten kinetics, although the range of concentrations used were not saturating. In contrast the application of the Lineweaver-Burk and Woolf plots to aquatic photosynthesis was not suitable as the experimental data was similar to the Blackman type curves and not rectangular hyperbolae. This was reflected by the applicability of the Hill-Whittingham equation to describe the photosynthesis curves. The effect of unstirred layers and other limiting factors is discussed in relation to the kinetic parameters, V max and K m.  相似文献   

5.
The cyanobacterium Oscillatoria agardhii was grown in continuous culture under various light conditions in order to study the interactions of light on phosphorus-limited growth. Under severe P-limiting (light-saturating) conditions, a low chlorophyll a and C-phycocyanin content was found. In addition, the light-harvesting capacity, reflected in the values of P max (maximum light-saturated oxygen production rate) and (photosynthetic affinity), were low compared to light-limited cultures.Reduction of the light climate, either by reduction of the length of the photoperiod or light-intensity, resulted in an increase in light-harvesting capacity (higher pigment content, P m and ) during growth under P-limiting conditions. Light-induced changes in P max and could be related to the relative growth rate, being the actual growth rate as a fraction of the growth rate which would be observed under light-limiting conditions.Under P-limiting conditions, reduction of the light-climate caused a reduction in dry weight of the culture. This decrease was mainly due to a decrease in carbohydrate content of the cells. Under all conditions tested, carbohydrates were found to accumulate during the light-period and to be consumed during the dark-period.Evaluation of carbohydrate consumption in the dark yielded a specific maintenance rate constant of 0.001 h-1. This observation leads to the conclusion that the specific maintenance rate constant is independent on the character of the growth rate limiting nutrient for O. agardhii.  相似文献   

6.
In outdoor thin-layer sloping reactors algae are batch cultured and harvested at biomass concentrations of about 15 g (dw) I-1 whereafter a portion is used as inoculum for the next cycle. Light saturation curves of the oxygen evolution (PII curves) of the algae were measured using diluted aliquots of suspension taken from the reactors. The maximum specific photosynthetic rates (P B max) and the light intensity at the onset of saturated photosynthesis (I k ) decreased whilst the maximum specific photosynthetic efficiency ( B ) increased with an increase in the biomass concentration, during the production cycle. These differences reflect transition from light- to dark-acclimated state of the algae that occurs as a result of an increase of the suspension concentration during the production cycle. During these experiments the thin-layered smooth sloping cultures (TLSS, culture depth 5–7 mm) had higher photosynthetic rates per volume than the thin-layered baffled sloping cultures (TLBS, culture depth 5–15 mm). This was ascribed to the higherP B max values of the algae grown in the TLSS cultures, allowing them to utilise high incident irradiancies more effectively. However, the areal productivity of the TLBS was higher than the TLSS indicating a higher photosynthetic efficiency of the TLBS reactors. The specific productivity decreased rapidly with an increase in the biomass concentration, but the yield remained linear during the batch production cycle, even at high areal densities.  相似文献   

7.
The photosynthetic response of the purple sulfur bacterium Chromatium vinosum DSM 185 to different degrees of illumination was analyzed. The microorganism was grown in continuous culture, and samples were taken from the effluent of the culture and incubated at different irradiances to determine the specific rate of sulfur oxidation as a measure of the photosynthetic activity of the organism. The activities obtained were plotted as a function of the specific rate of light uptake, and for each set of data a photosynthesis equation was fitted, which allowed the estimation of Pmax (photosynthetic capacity), qk (the threshold irradiance for light limitation), and m (maintenance coefficient). The results indicated that cells grown under light limitation are able to achieve higher photosynthetic activities than cells grown under light saturation. The photosynthetic capacity (Pmax) remained constant under all the conditions of illumination tested, while the maintenance expenses (m) were higher under light limitation. The parameter qk, on the contrary, decreased considerably at limiting irradiances. Received: 16 January 1998 / Accepted: 7 September 1998  相似文献   

8.
Electron flow around photosystem II was investigated in Chlorella pyrenoidosa. Using a bare platinum O2 electrode, simultaneous measuremnts were made of steady-state photosynthesis in continuous light, the yield of oxygen (Yo2) produced by a superimposed saturating xenon flash, and the change in fluorescence yield of a weak flash triggered before and 70 microseconds after the saturating flash. Throughout most of the continuous photosynthesis-irradiance curve, normalized O2 flash yields (Yo2/Yo2max) and normalized variable fluorescence yields (Δ/Δ′) were linearly correlated with a slope of 1.0. As photosynthetic rates reached light saturation, however, the variable fluorescence yields remained relatively constant while O2 flash yields decreased. These results strongly suggest that there is a cyclic electron flow around photosystem II in unpoisoned intact cells at light saturation and supraoptimal light intensities.  相似文献   

9.
Photosynthetic characteristics of Cymbidium plantlet in vitro   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The photosynthetic characteristics of the Cymbidium plantlet in vitro cultured on Hyponex-agar medium with 2% sucrose were determined based on the measurements of CO2 concentration inside and outside of the culture vessels. The CO2 measurements were made with a gas chromatograph at a PPF (photosynthetic photon flux) of 35, 102 and 226 mol m-2 s-1, a chamber air temperature of 15, 25 and 35°C and a CO2 concentration outside the vessel of approximately 350, 1100 and 3000 ppm. The net photosynthetic rates were determined on individual plantlets and were expressed on a dry weight basis. The steady-state CO2 concentration during the photoperiod was lower inside the vessel than outside the vessel at any PPF greater than 35 mol m-2s-1 and at any chamber air temperature. The photosynthetic response curves relating the net photosynthetic rate, PPF, and CO2 concentration in the vessel and chamber air temperature were similar to those for Cymbidium plants grown outside and other C3 plants grown outside under shade. The results indicate that CO2 enrichment for the plantlets in vitro at a relatively high PPF would promote photosynthesis and hence the growth of chlorophyllous shoots/plantlets in vitro and that the plantlets in vitro would make photoautotrophic growth under environmental conditions favorable for photosynthesis.Abbreviations Cin CO2 concentration in the culture vessel - Cout CO2 concentration outside the vessel (in the culture room) - PPF photosynthetic photon flux  相似文献   

10.
SUMMARY.
  • 1 The macrophyte community of Lake George, New York is diverse, composing of forty-eight submersed species representing a wide range of habitats, depth ranges and life-history strategies. The photosynthetic rates of seven representative submersed aquatic macrophytes were determined in laboratory studies using measurements of short-term changes in oxygen concentration at eight light intensities from 0 to 1000 μmol m?2 s?1 at 20°C. The species examined were: Elodea canadensis, Myriophyllum spicatum, Potamogeton amplifolius, P. gramineus, P. praelongus, P. robbinsii, and Vallisneria americana.
  • 2 Comparisons of maximum net photosynthesis, Michaelis–Menten Vmax and Km for photosynthesis versus irradiance, and dark respiration rates correlated with changes in community composition and species distribution with depth.
  • 3 In particular, Myriophyllum spicatum exhibited a high photosynthetic rate (Vmax) and high light requirement (both in compensation point and higher half-saturation constant (Km) indicative of a high light-adapted species. In contrast, the native species exhibited shade-tolerant characteristics.
  • 4 Simple daily carbon balance models indicate that M. spicatum has a higher positive carbon balance near the surface than the native species, but carbon balance decreased more rapidly with decreased light. All species showed greatly reduced carbon balances under a simulated M. spicatum canopy, indicating that native species might not survive. Myriopyllum spicatum leaves would experience self-shading and eventual sloughing.
  相似文献   

11.
Irradiance continuously fluctuates during the day in the field. The speed of the induction response of photosynthesis in high light affects the cumulative carbon gain of the plant and could impact growth and yield. The photosynthetic induction response and its relationship with the photosynthetic capacity under steady-state conditions (P max) were evaluated in 37 diverse soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] genotypes. The induction response of leaf photosynthesis showed large variation among the soybean genotypes. After 5 min illumination with strong light, genotype NAM23 had the highest leaf photosynthetic rate of 33.8 µmol CO2 m?2 s?1, while genotype NAM12 showed the lowest rate at 4.7 µmol CO2 m?2 s?1. Cumulative CO2 fixation (CCF) during the first 5 min of high light exposure ranged from 5.5 mmol CO2 m?2 for NAM23 to 0.81 mmol CO2 m?2 for NAM12. The difference in the induction response among genotypes was consistent throughout the growth season. However, there was no significant correlation between CCF and P max among genotypes suggesting that different mechanisms regulate P max and the induction response. The observed variation in the induction response was mainly attributed to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activation, but soybean lines differing in the induction response did not differ in the leaf content of Rubisco activase α- and β-proteins. Future studies will be focused on identifying molecular determinants of the photosynthetic induction response and determining whether this trait could be an important breeding target to achieve improved growth of soybeans in the field.  相似文献   

12.
Photosynthetic capacity and leaf properties of sun and shade leaves of overstorey sweetgum trees (Liquidambar styraciflua L.) were compared over the first 3 years of growth in ambient or ambient + 200 μL L?1 CO2 at the Duke Forest Free Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment. We were interested in whether photosynthetic down‐regulation to CO2 occurred in sweetgum trees growing in a forest ecosystem, whether shade leaves down‐regulated to a greater extent than sun leaves, and if there was a seasonal component to photosynthetic down‐regulation. During June and September of each year, we measured net photosynthesis (A) versus the calculated intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) in situ and analysed these response curves using a biochemical model that described the limitations imposed by the amount and activity of ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Vcmax) and by the rate of ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration mediated by electron transport (Jmax). There was no evidence of photosynthetic down‐regulation to CO2 in either sun or shade leaves of sweetgum trees over the 3 years of measurements. Elevated CO2 did not significantly affect Vcmax or Jmax. The ratio of Vcmax to Jmax was relatively constant, averaging 2·12, and was not affected by CO2 treatment, position in the canopy, or measurement period. Furthermore, CO2 enrichment did not affect leaf nitrogen per unit leaf area (Na), chlorophyll or total non‐structural carbohydrates of sun or shade leaves. We did, however, find a strong relationship between Na and the modelled components of photosynthetic capacity, Vcmax and Jmax. Our data over the first 3 years of this experiment corroborate observations that trees rooted in the ground may not exhibit symptoms of photosynthetic down‐regulation as quickly as tree seedlings growing in pots. There was a strong sustained enhancement of photosynthesis by CO2 enrichment whereby light‐saturated net photosynthesis of sun leaves was stimulated by 63% and light‐saturated net photosynthesis of shade leaves was stimulated by 48% when averaged over the 3 years. This study suggests that this CO2 enhancement of photosynthesis will be sustained in the Duke Forest FACE experiment as long as soil N availability keeps pace with photosynthetic and growth processes.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Abies nordmanniana (Stev.) Spach was cultivated in rooting media either rich in nutrients (control) or low in magnesium (low Mg) or low in magnesium and nitrogen (low Mg-N), respectively. Intact, attached needles were exposed, in the light (460 mol photons m-2 s-1), to an atmosphere containing 1 ppm SO2 for 5 h. Measurements of light- and CO2-saturated rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution, A max, were performed before and after SO2 treatments. In needles from well fertilized plants, A max was high (about 50 mol m-2 s-1) and was not affected by SO2. Needles from low-Mg and low-Mg-N plants had lower photosynthetic rates and showed a marked decline in A max in response to the SO2 treatment. Stomatal conductance was similar in the three groups of plants during SO2 treatments.Abbreviations A max photosynthetic capacity (CO2- and light-saturated rate of O2 evolution) - DW dry weight - Fo yield of dark level fluorescence - FM maximum yield of fluorescence, induced in a pulse of saturating light - Fv yield of variable fluorescence (= FM–FO) - FW fresh weight; g, conductance to water vapor transfer  相似文献   

14.
Calcifying coralline algae are functionally important in many ecosystems but their existence is now threatened by global climate change. The aim of this study is to improve our understanding of coralline algal metabolic functions and their interactions by assessing the respiration, photosynthesis and calcification rates in an articulated (geniculate) coralline alga, Ellisolandia elongata. Algal samples selected for this case study were collected from an intertidal rock-pool on the coast of Brittany (France). Physiological rates were assessed in summer and winter by measuring the concentration of oxygen, dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity fluxes at five irradiance levels and in the dark using incubation chambers.

Respiration, photosynthetic and calcification rates were strongly affected by seasonal changes. Respiration increased with temperature, being ten-fold higher in summer than in winter. Photosynthetic parameters of the photosynthesis-irradiance (P-E) curve, Pgmax, Pnmax and Ek, were two- to three-fold higher in summer relative to winter. Photoinhibition was observed under high irradiance indicating an acclimation of E. elongata to low irradiance levels. Parameters of the calcification-irradiance (G-E) curve, Gmax and Ek, were approximately two-fold higher in summer compared with winter. In summer, calcification rates were more strongly inhibited under high irradiance than photosynthetic rates, suggesting a dynamic relationship between these metabolic processes. By inhabiting intertidal rock pools, E. elongata exhibits tolerance to a dynamic physico-chemical environment. Information on respiration, photosynthesis and calcification rates in a calcifying coralline alga inhabiting such dynamic environments in terms of pH and temperature is important in order to better understand how ocean acidification and warming will affect coralline algae in the future.  相似文献   


15.
A dependence of the photosynthesis rate on light is characterized by a number of parameters that are often used for comparison between plant species or for finding photosynthesis interconnections with other physiological processes. In order to properly assessed these parameters, we measured the maximum apparent photosynthesis rate (P max), dark respiration rate (R d), light compensation point (LCP), quantum yield corresponding to photosynthetic efficiency (QY), and the light saturation constant (K s), taking into consideration the leaf plastochron index during vegetation of one of the willow species (Salix dasyclados Wimn.). The P max value was the highest in the beginning of the growth season when the leaf reached 65% of its full area; after that P max slowly declined. The most important cardinal value for R d is its plateau reached by the end of leaf growth, i.e., later than the photosynthesis rate maximum. This plateau value also decreased during vegetation. The LCP value changed in the same way as R d but reached its plateau simultaneously with the photosynthesis rate maximum. QY also reached its maximum at the same time with the photosynthesis rate; during vegetation it changed more than twofold. The K s value also changed almost twofold during the season, reaching its maximum together or slightly later than the photosynthesis maximum and then remained constant. Thus, we have found significant changes in the parameters of the photosynthesis light curve during growth season. This shows that they can be used only after a thorough study of leaf development in each particular plant species. Usually performed measuring gas exchange parameters in fully developed leaves does not yield their maximum values and thus does not have any physiological sense.  相似文献   

16.
Anabaena sp., isolated from a rice paddy, was investigated for its nitrogen fixation as measured by acetylene reduction activity (ARA) in P-limited continuous and light-limited semi-continuous cultures. Growth rate (μ) under P limitation was a function of cell P content (q p). Both the photosynthetic capacity (Pmax) and photosynthetic efficiency (α) increased with μ when expressed per cell, but not per unit chla. The ARA of steady-state cells under P limitation increased with μ and was linearly related to C-fixation rate. This was apparently a consequence of the control of C-fixation by P limitation. In light-limited cells, steady state ARA, both at the culture light intensity and in the dark, increased asymptotically with μ, but the activity in the dark was only about 51% of that in the light. When the light level of steady-state cells grown at a high in intensity was switched to a low level, ARA decreased exponentially with time. Dark ARA activity also showed a similar decline, but at much lower levels. Thus, ARA depended not only on light history, but also immediate photosynthesis. Steady-state ARA at the ambient intensity or in the dark showed a strong correlation with14C-fixation rate. ARA of light-limited cells showed the same light-saturation characteristics as their14C-fixation, with the same initial saturation intensity,I k. The ratios of Pmax to the maximum ARA (ARAmax), and α to the slope of ARA (αara) were identical. A comparison of gross to net photosynthesis and N2 fixation suggested that there was little leakage or excretion of fixed C or N.  相似文献   

17.
Young sporophytes of short-stipe ecotype ofEcklonia cavafrom a warmer locality (Tei, Kochi Pref., southern Japan) and those of long-stipe ecotype from a cooler locality (Nabeta, Shizuoka Pref., central Japan) were transplanted in 1995 to artificial reefs immersed at the habitat of long-stipe ecotype in Nabeta Bay, Shizuoka Pref., central Japan. The characteristics of photosynthesis and respiration of bladelets of the transplanted sporophytes of the two ecotypes were compared in winter and summer 1997; the results were assessed per unit area, per unit chlorophyllacontent and per unit dry weight. In photosynthesis-light curves at 10–29 °C, light saturation occurred at 200–400 mol photon m–2s–1in sporophytes from both Tei and Nabeta. The maximum photosynthetic rate (P max) at 10–29 °C and the light-saturation index (I k) at 25–29 °C in sporophytes from both localities were generally higher in winter than in summer.P maxat 25–29 °C (per unit area and chlorophylla) were higher in sporophytes from Tei than those from Nabeta in both seasons. The optimum temperature for photosynthesis was 25 °C in winter and 27 °C in summer at high light intensities of 100–400 mol photon m–2s–1. However, at lower light intensities of 12.5–50 mol photon m–2s–1, it was 20 °C in winter and 25–27 °C in summer for sporophytes from both locations. Dark respiration increased with temperature rise in the range of 10–29 °C in sporophytes from both locations in summer and winter. The sporophytes transplanted from Tei (warmer area) showed higher photosynthetic activities than those from Nabeta (cooler area) at warmer temperatures even under the same environmental conditions. This indicates that these physiological ecotypes have arisen from genetic differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
The primary production of Ulva populations relies on their photosynthetic performance, which is dependent on the light availability under natural conditions. This study concerns the light attenuation characteristics in Ulva canopies and the seasonal photosynthetic performance of two different species (Ulva rotundata Blid., Ulva curvata (Kütz.) De Toni) blooming in the Palmones river estuary. Light within canopies differed from that reaching the surface. Light availability was reduced through the water column (at high tide) and Ulva canopies. In addition, light was spectrally filtered. As a result, the photosynthetically usable radiation (PUR) was further attenuated through Ulva canopies, increasing the photosynthetically active radiation/PUR ratio. The muddy sediment deposited on and between the Ulva thalli also drastically restricted the light availability. Thick Ulva mats are frequently found covering the intertidal mudflats, and therefore, thalli within these mats may be subjected to steep light gradients. As a consequence, individual Ulva growth rates cannot be extrapolated to estimate the primary production of Ulva canopies. Interspecific differences were observed for light-saturated photosynthetic rates (Pmax) and light compensation points (LCP), with Ulva curvata generally displaying higher values than did U. rotundata. For both species, maxima were recorded in winter for Pmax, quantum yield, chlorophyll content, and absorptance, whereas minima were found in summer. Dark respiration (Rd) was not seasonally affected, and a maximum LCP was found in summer. To extrapolate these data to field situations, the temperature dependence of photosynthesis should be considered. The Q10 values were 2.44 for Rd and 1.79 for Pmax, whereas the photosynthesis rate at subsaturating light levels was unaffected. The Q10 values showed an enhanced respiratory rate in summer and a minimum in winter, whereas the seasonal differences on Pmax were damped.  相似文献   

19.
Results on the effect of sub-lethal concentrations of zinc chloride (ZnCl2), cadmium chloride (CdCl2), and mercuric chloride (HgCl2) on Euglena are presented. During the growth cycle respiratory oxygen uptake and photosynthetic oxygen evolution in the light are initially strongly inhibited by Zn, Cd and Hg. The effects of the three metals on photosynthesis, using oxygen evolution as a criterion was confirmed by carbon fixation techniques.Photosystem I (PSI) associated electron transport 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol (DCPIP)red. methyl viologen (MV) O2, in contrast to total photosynthetic capacity, was only slightly inhibited by Zn, Cd and Hg, whereas the levels of activity of NADP-oxidoreductase in cells untreated or treated with heavy metals showed development like total photosynthesis. Metals strongly inhibited this enzyme which means that the supply of NADPH is lowered due to the action of Zn, Cd and Hg. Photosystem II (PSII) associated electron transport (H2O dibromothymoquinone/2,3-dimethyl-5,6-methylenedioxy-D-benzoquinone O2), however, was severely inhibited in a way similar to total photosynthesis. Effects on the cooperation of PSI + II showed patterns similar to PSII alone, i.e., heavy metals strongly reduced PSI + II dependent activities.Abbreviations DAD diaminodurene - DBMIB dibromothymoquinone - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DMMIB 2,3-dimethyl-5,6-methylenedioxy-p-benzoquinone - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - MV methylviologen - PS photosystem Dedicated to Professor Kandler on occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

20.
We investigated to what extent south-exposed leaves (E-leaves) of the evergreen ivy (Hedera helix L.) growing in the shadow of two deciduous trees suffered from photoinhibition of photosynthesis when leaf-shedding started in autumn. Since air temperatures drop concomitantly with increase in light levels, changes in photosynthetic parameters (apparent quantum yield, i and maximal photosynthetic capacity of O2 evolution, Pmax; chlorophyll-a fluorescence at room temperature) as well as pigment composition were compared with those in north-exposed leaves of the same clone (N-leaves; photosynthetic photon flux density PPFD< 100 mol · m–2 · s–2) and phenotypic sun leaves (S-leaves; PPFD up to 2000 mol · m–2 · s–1).In leaves exposed to drastic light changes during winter (E-leaves) strong photoinhibition of photosynthesis could be observed as soon as the incident PPFD increased in autumn. In contrast, in N-leaves the ratio of variable fluorescence to maximum fluorescence (FV/FMm) and i did not decline appreciably prior to severe frosts (up to -12° C) in January. At this time, i was reduced to a similar extent in all leaves, from about 0.073 mol O2 · mol–1 photons before stress to about 0.020. Changes in i were linearly correlated with changes in fv/fm (r = 0.955). The strong reduction in FV/FM on exposure to stress was caused by quenching in FM. The initial fluorescence (F0), however, was also quenched in all leaves. The diminished fluorescence yield was accompanied by an increase in zeaxanthin content. These effects indicate that winter stress in ivy primarily induces an increase in non-radiative energy-dissipation followed by photoinhibitory damage of PSII. Although a pronounced photooxidative bleaching of chloroplast pigments occurred in January (especially in E-leaves), photosynthetic parameters recovered completely in spring. Thus, the reduction in potential photosynthetic yield in winter may be up to three times greater in leaves subjected to increasing light levels than in leaves not exposed to a changing light environment.Abbreviations and Symbols F0, FM initial and maximal fluorescence yield when all PSII centres are open and closed - FV variable fluorescence (FM-F0) - Pmax maximal photosynthetic capacity at 1000 umol · m–2 · s–1 PPFD and CO2 saturation - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - i apparent quantum yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution - E-leaves, N-leaves shade leaves exposed, not exposed to drastic light changes during winter - S-leaves sun leaves from an open ivy stand Dedicated to Professor Otto Härtel on the occasion of his 80th birthdayThis work was supported by the Austrian Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung.  相似文献   

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