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1.
We have developed a laser induced fluorescence transient (LIFT) technique and instrumentation to remotely measure photosynthetic properties in terrestrial vegetation at a distance of up to 50 m. The LIFT method uses a 665 nm laser to project a collimated, 100 mm diameter excitation beam onto leaves of the targeted plant. Fluorescence emission at 690 nm is collected by a 250 mm reflective telescope and processed in real time to calculate the efficiency of photosynthetic light utilization, quantum efficiency of PS II, and the kinetics of photosynthetic electron transport. Operating with peak excitation power of 125 W m−2, and duty cycle of 10–50%, the instrument conforms to laser safety regulations. The LIFT instrument is controlled via an Internet connection, allowing it to operate from remote locations or platforms. Here we describe the theoretical basis of the LIFT methodology, and demonstrate its applications in remote measurements of photosynthetic properties in the canopy of cottonwood and oak trees, and in the rosette of Arabidopsis mutants.  相似文献   

2.
Accurate estimation of terrestrial gross primary productivity (GPP) remains a challenge despite its importance in the global carbon cycle. Chlorophyll fluorescence (ChlF) has been recently adopted to understand photosynthesis and its response to the environment, particularly with remote sensing data. However, it remains unclear how ChlF and photosynthesis are linked at different spatial scales across the growing season. We examined seasonal relationships between ChlF and photosynthesis at the leaf, canopy, and ecosystem scales and explored how leaf‐level ChlF was linked with canopy‐scale solar‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) in a temperate deciduous forest at Harvard Forest, Massachusetts, USA. Our results show that ChlF captured the seasonal variations of photosynthesis with significant linear relationships between ChlF and photosynthesis across the growing season over different spatial scales (R= 0.73, 0.77, and 0.86 at leaf, canopy, and satellite scales, respectively; P < 0.0001). We developed a model to estimate GPP from the tower‐based measurement of SIF and leaf‐level ChlF parameters. The estimation of GPP from this model agreed well with flux tower observations of GPP (R= 0.68; P < 0.0001), demonstrating the potential of SIF for modeling GPP. At the leaf scale, we found that leaf Fq/Fm, the fraction of absorbed photons that are used for photochemistry for a light‐adapted measurement from a pulse amplitude modulation fluorometer, was the best leaf fluorescence parameter to correlate with canopy SIF yield (SIF/APAR, R= 0.79; P < 0.0001). We also found that canopy SIF and SIF‐derived GPP (GPPSIF) were strongly correlated to leaf‐level biochemistry and canopy structure, including chlorophyll content (R= 0.65 for canopy GPPSIF and chlorophyll content; P < 0.0001), leaf area index (LAI) (R= 0.35 for canopy GPPSIF and LAI; P < 0.0001), and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) (R= 0.36 for canopy GPPSIF and NDVI; P < 0.0001). Our results suggest that ChlF can be a powerful tool to track photosynthetic rates at leaf, canopy, and ecosystem scales.  相似文献   

3.
《Global Change Biology》2018,24(7):2980-2996
Leaf fluorescence can be used to track plant development and stress, and is considered the most direct measurement of photosynthetic activity available from remote sensing techniques. Red and far‐red sun‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) maps were generated from high spatial resolution images collected with the HyPlant airborne spectrometer over even‐aged loblolly pine plantations in North Carolina (United States). Canopy fluorescence yield (i.e., the fluorescence flux normalized by the light absorbed) in the red and far‐red peaks was computed. This quantifies the fluorescence emission efficiencies that are more directly linked to canopy function compared to SIF radiances. Fluorescence fluxes and yields were investigated in relation to tree age to infer new insights on the potential of those measurements in better describing ecosystem processes. The results showed that red fluorescence yield varies with stand age. Young stands exhibited a nearly twofold higher red fluorescence yield than mature forest plantations, while the far‐red fluorescence yield remained constant. We interpreted this finding in a context of photosynthetic stomatal limitation in aging loblolly pine stands. Current and future satellite missions provide global datasets of SIF at coarse spatial resolution, resulting in intrapixel mixture effects, which could be a confounding factor for fluorescence signal interpretation. To mitigate this effect, we propose a surrogate of the fluorescence yield, namely the Canopy Cover Fluorescence Index (CCFI) that accounts for the spatial variability in canopy structure by exploiting the vegetation fractional cover. It was found that spatial aggregation tended to mask the effective relationships, while the CCFI was still able to maintain this link. This study is a first attempt in interpreting the fluorescence variability in aging forest stands and it may open new perspectives in understanding long‐term forest dynamics in response to future climatic conditions from remote sensing of SIF.  相似文献   

4.
Using optical and photosynthetic assays from a canopy access crane, we examined the photosynthetic performance of tropical dry forest canopies during the dry season in Parque Metropolitano, Panama City, Panama. Photosynthetic gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, and three indices derived from spectral reflectance (the normalized difference vegetation index, the simple ratio, and the photochemical reflectance index) were used as indicators of structural and physiological components of photosynthetic activity. Considerable interspecific variation was evident in structural and physiological behavior in this forest stand, which included varying degrees of foliage loss, altered leaf orientation, stomatal closure, and photosystem II downregulation. The normalized difference vegetation index and the simple ratio were closely related to canopy structure and absorbed radiation for most species, but failed to capture the widely divergent photosynthetic behavior among evergreen species exhibiting various degrees of downregulation. The photochemical reflectance index and chlorophyll fluorescence were related indicators of photosynthetic downregulation, which was not detectable with the normalized difference vegetation index or simple ratio. These results suggest that remote sensing methods that ignore downregulation cannot capture within‐stand variability in actual carbon flux for this diverse forest type. Instead, these findings support a sampling approach that derives photosynthetic fluxes from a consideration of both canopy light absorption (e.g., normalized difference vegetation index) and photosynthetic light‐use efficiency (e.g., photochemical reflectance index). Such sampling should improve our understanding of controls on photosynthetic carbon uptake in diverse tropical forest stands.  相似文献   

5.
Variations in photosynthesis still cause substantial uncertainties in predicting photosynthetic CO2 uptake rates and monitoring plant stress. Changes in actual photosynthesis that are not related to greenness of vegetation are difficult to measure by reflectance based optical remote sensing techniques. Several activities are underway to evaluate the sun‐induced fluorescence signal on the ground and on a coarse spatial scale using space‐borne imaging spectrometers. Intermediate‐scale observations using airborne‐based imaging spectroscopy, which are critical to bridge the existing gap between small‐scale field studies and global observations, are still insufficient. Here we present the first validated maps of sun‐induced fluorescence in that critical, intermediate spatial resolution, employing the novel airborne imaging spectrometer HyPlant. HyPlant has an unprecedented spectral resolution, which allows for the first time quantifying sun‐induced fluorescence fluxes in physical units according to the Fraunhofer Line Depth Principle that exploits solar and atmospheric absorption bands. Maps of sun‐induced fluorescence show a large spatial variability between different vegetation types, which complement classical remote sensing approaches. Different crop types largely differ in emitting fluorescence that additionally changes within the seasonal cycle and thus may be related to the seasonal activation and deactivation of the photosynthetic machinery. We argue that sun‐induced fluorescence emission is related to two processes: (i) the total absorbed radiation by photosynthetically active chlorophyll; and (ii) the functional status of actual photosynthesis and vegetation stress.  相似文献   

6.
Sustained drought and concomitant high temperature may reduce photosynthesis and cause tree mortality. Possible causes of reduced photosynthesis include stomatal closure and biochemical inhibition, but their relative roles are unknown in Amazon trees during strong drought events. We assessed the effects of the recent (2015) strong El Niño drought on leaf‐level photosynthesis of Central Amazon trees via these two mechanisms. Through four seasons of 2015, we measured leaf gas exchange, chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters, chlorophyll concentration, and nutrient content in leaves of 57 upper canopy and understory trees of a lowland terra firme forest on well‐drained infertile oxisol. Photosynthesis decreased 28% in the upper canopy and 17% in understory trees during the extreme dry season of 2015, relative to other 2015 seasons and was also lower than the climatically normal dry season of the following non‐El Niño year. Photosynthesis reduction under extreme drought and high temperature in the 2015 dry season was related only to stomatal closure in both upper canopy and understory trees, and not to chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters, chlorophyll, or leaf nutrient concentration. The distinction is important because stomatal closure is a transient regulatory response that can reverse when water becomes available, whereas the other responses reflect more permanent changes or damage to the photosynthetic apparatus. Photosynthesis decrease due to stomatal closure during the 2015 extreme dry season was followed 2 months later by an increase in photosynthesis as rains returned, indicating a margin of resilience to one‐off extreme climatic events in Amazonian forests.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Sudden illumination of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L. cv. CGL 208) leaves and canopies led to excess absorbed PFD and induced apparent reflectance changes in the green, red and near-infrared detectable with a remote spectroradiometer. The green shift, centered near 531 nm, was caused by reflectance changes associated with the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin via antheraxanthin and with the chloroplast thylakoid pH gradient. The red (685 nm) and near-infrared (738 nm) signals were due to quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. Remote sensing of shifts in these spectral regions provides non-destructive information on in situ photosynthetic performance and could lead to improved techniques for remote sensing of canopy photosynthesis.CIW Publication #1072  相似文献   

8.
This study examined the ability of the photochemical reflectance index (PRI) to track changes in effective quantum yield (Δ F/F m ′), non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), and the xanthophyll cycle de-epoxidation (DPS) in an experimental mangrove canopy. PRI was correlated with (Δ F/F m ′) and NPQ over the 4-week measurement period and over the diurnal cycle. The normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) was not correlated with any aspect of photochemical efficiency measured using chlorophyll fluorescence or xanthophyll pigments. This study demonstrated that photochemical adjustments were responsible for controlling the flow of energy through the photosynthetic apparatus in this mangrove forest canopy rather than canopy structural or chlorophyll adjustments.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Diurnal measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence from cacti (Nopalea cochenillifera, Opuntia ficus-indica, and Opuntia wentiana) growing in northern Venezuela were used to determine photochemical fluorescence quenching related to the reduction state of the primary electron acceptor of PS II as well as non-photochemical fluorescence quenching which reflects the fraction of energy going primarily into radiationless deexcitation. The cladodes used in this study were oriented such that one surface received direct sunlight in the morning and the other one during the afternoon. Both surfaces exhibited large increases in radiationless energy dissipation from the photochemical system accompanied by decreases in PS II photochemical efficiency during direct exposure to natural sunlight. During exposure to sunlight in the morning, dissipation of absorbed light energy through photosynthesis and radiationless energy dissipation was sufficient to maintain Q, the primary electron acceptor for PS II, in a low reduction state. During exposure to sunlight in the afternoon, however, the reduction state of Q rose to levels greater than 50%, presumably due to a decrease in photosynthetic electron transport as the decarboxylation of the nocturnally accumulated malic acid was completed. Exposure to direct sunlight in the afternoon also led to more sustained increases in radiationless energy dissipation. Furthermore, the increases in radiationless energy dissipation during exposure of a water-stressed cladode of O. wentiana to direct sunlight were much greater than those from other well-watered cacti, presumably due to sustained stomatal closure and decreased rates of photosynthetic electron transport. These results indicate that the radiationless dissipation of absorbed light is an important process in these CAM plants under natural conditions, and may reflect a protective mechanism against the potentially damaging effects of the accumulation of excessive energy, particularly under conditions where CO2 availability is restricted.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - F o instantaneous fluorescence emission - F M maximum fluorescence emission - F v variable fluorescence emission - K D rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll - PFD photon flux density - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II - Q primary electron acceptor of photosystem II - q NP non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - q P photochemical fluorescence quenching - T C cladode temperature  相似文献   

10.
Diurnal time courses of net CO2 assimilation rates, stomatal conductance and light-driven electron fluxes were measured in situ on attached leaves of 30-year-old Turkey oak trees (Quercus cerris L.) under natural summer conditions in central Italy. Combined measurements of gas exchange and chlorophyll a fluorescence under low O2 concentrations allowed the demonstration of a linear relationship between the photochemical efficiency of PSII (fluorescence measurements) and the apparent quantum yield of gross photosynthesis (gas exchange). This relationship was used under normal O2 to compute total light-driven electron fluxes, and to partition them into fractions used for RuBP carboxylation or RuBP oxygenation. This procedure also yielded an indirect estimate of the rate of photorespiration in vivo. The time courses of light-driven electron flow, net CO2 assimilation and photorespiration paralleled that of photosynthetic photon flux density, with important afternoon deviations as soon as a severe drought stress occurred, whereas photochemical efficiency and maximal fluorescence underwent large but reversible diurnal decreases. The latter observation indicated the occurrence of a large non-photochemical energy dissipation at PSII. We estimated that less than 60% of the total photosynthetic electron flow was used for carbon assimilation at midday, while about 40% was devoted to photorespiration. The rate of carbon loss by photorespiration (R1) reached mean levels of 56% of net assimilation rates. The potential application of this technique to analysis of the relative contributions of thermal de-excitation at PSII and photorespiratory carbon recycling in the protection of photosynthesis against stress effects is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: We used chlorophyll fluorescence imaging to examine the homogeneity of photosynthetic metabolism during CAM in the thick leaves of Kalanchoë daigremontiana Hamet et Perrier de la Bǎthie. Intense, persistent fluorescence from a DCMU treated thin leaf of Clematis sp placed beneath a K. daigremontiana leaf was readily detected through the thick leaf. Evidently reabsorption of fluorescence was qualitatively unimportant in the system used. Chlorophyll fluorescence images from 7 mm tissue discs excised from Kalanchoë leaves were collected at 60 s intervals during 20 min transients elicited by red excitation light. Information about patchiness and subsurface processes was gained by statistical factor analysis and Fourier transform. Although small, highly resolved rings of bright chlorophyll fluorescence surrounding discs of low fluorescence were observed from cells near the surface, no independent regional temporal variation in fluorescence was evident in the surface‐biased images. Temporally independent chlorophyll fluorescence was present in images biased towards sub‐epidermal sources, in most phases of CAM, and during endogenous rhythm. These asynchronous changes were several millimetres apart. This patchy fluorescence was confirmed when attached leaves were excited with blue light in a leaf chamber while CO2 and H2O exchange was monitored. Large spatio‐temporal variations in the efficiency of photosystem II were always observed during phases II and IV of CAM, when both CO2 fixation cycles are active, and during the maximum rate of CO2 fixation during the endogenous rhythm in continuous light. These data are discussed in terms of metabolic isolation in the thick but uniform tissues in which gas diffusion may be largely confined to wet cell walls, thereby rendering the tissue functionally heterobaric. Prolonged, but in some instances, reversible alterations in PSII efficiency could be produced by injection of metabolic inhibitors, confirming that patchy fluorescence may reflect the differing energy costs of photosynthesis in different CAM phases.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: Parameters associated with the photosynthetic performance of eight common epiphytic ferns in a Mexican cloud forest were investigated in relation to the distribution of these species within the canopy. If the substantial microclimatic gradients within tropical forest canopies provide microhabitats exploited by different epiphytic species, we would expect to find correlations between distribution and physiological traits. Maximum rates of CO2 uptake (Amax) and photon flux densities at light compensation points (LCP) were in the range of shade plants (Amax = 0.6 ‐ 5.2 μmol m‐2 s‐1; LCP = 4 ‐ 6.5 μmol m‐2 s‐1), but saturation light intensities were more typical for sun plants (270 ‐ 550 μmol m‐2 s‐1). Amax and nitrogen content per unit dry weight were correlated with the distribution of the species within the canopy, but LCP, apparent quantum yield and dark respiration were not. When leaves were left to desiccate, the fluorescence yield of dark‐adapted leaves (Y0) remained high until the relative water content (RWC) had dropped below 30 to 20 %. Fluorescence after short illumination with 200 μmol m‐2 s‐1 declined when RWC dropped below 70 to 40 %. After exposure to full sunlight for 1 h, Y0 of species growing in the outer canopy (Pleopeltis mexicana and Polypodium plebeium) and a plant characteristic of the mid‐canopy (Elaphoglossum petiolatum) recovered better than in species from shadier locations (Trichomanes bucinatum, Asplenium cuspidatum, Phlebodium areolatum). With the exception of Ph. areolatum and a species growing at both exposed and shaded sites (Polypodium puberulum), Y0 recovered at least partially after a loss of 80 ‐ 96 % of saturation water, with the humidity‐loving filmy fern (T. bucinatum) showing no signs of permanent damage at all. The results suggest that tolerance or avoidance of desiccation and high light may be at least as important in controlling the distribution of the species studied as photosynthetic performance without stress.  相似文献   

13.
Emissions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOC) by boreal evergreen trees have strong seasonality, with low emission rates during photosynthetically inactive winter and increasing rates towards summer. Yet, the regulation of this seasonality remains unclear. We measured in situ monoterpene emissions from Scots pine shoots during several spring periods and analysed their dynamics in connection with the spring recovery of photosynthesis. We found high emission peaks caused by enhanced monoterpene synthesis consistently during every spring period (monoterpene emission bursts, MEB). The timing of the MEBs varied relatively little between the spring periods. The timing of the MEBs showed good agreement with the photosynthetic spring recovery, which was studied with simultaneous measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence, CO2 exchange and a simple, temperature history‐based proxy for state of photosynthetic acclimation, S. We conclude that the MEBs were related to the early stages of photosynthetic recovery, when the efficiency of photosynthetic carbon reactions is still low whereas the light harvesting machinery actively absorbs light energy. This suggests that the MEBs may serve a protective functional role for the foliage during this critical transitory state and that these high emission peaks may contribute to atmospheric chemistry in the boreal forest in springtime.  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthesis is an important component of upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) yield, but little has been done to increase the photosynthetic performance within the cotton germplasm pool. Part of this dilemma is due to the multi-component aspect of this process and also to lack of information on genetic variation among such components. The objectives of this research were to identify genetic variability in photosynthetic components for six cotton genotypes previously shown to differ in leaf CO2-exchange rates (CER) and to determine if an afternoon decline in photosynthesis altered genotypic differences in CER. CO2-exchange rates were measured at several internal CO2 levels (Ci) to generate CER vs. Ci curves for each genotype and thereby isolate some of the components of photosynthesis. Ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco), hydroxypyruvate reductase, malate dehydrogenase, and catalase activities were assayed on leaves used to generate the CER vs. Ci curves. Ambient CER and chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence measurements were taken before and after solar noon to test for an afternoon decline in photosynthesis. Dixie King, a low ambient CER genotype, exhibited a greater CO2 compensation point, lower carboxylation efficiency, and reduced Photosystem II (PS II) activity than the other genotypes. The carboxylation efficiency of DES 119 was 13% greater than STV 508 and 29% greater than Dixie King, but not different from the other genotypes in 1994. Pee Dee 3 had greater maximum assimilation rate (A) than all other genotypes except STV 213 in 1993. Although no significant genotype by time of day interaction was detected, CER and Chl fluorescence variable to maximum ratio (Fv/Fm) were reduced 8% and 39%, respectively, in the afternoon as compared to the morning. This study demonstrates genetic variations in many of the components of photosynthesis. However, the narrow range of variation in such components for superior photosynthesizing genotypes explains why difficulties are encountered when breeding for increased photosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Cladophora glomerata (L.) Kütz. is the dominant filamentous algae of the river Ilm, Thuringia, Germany. For most of the year it can be found at open as well as at shaded sites. Photosynthetic acclimation of C. glomerata to different light intensities was detected by chlorophyll fluorescence measurements and pigment analysis. Cladophora glomerata from highlight sites showed decreased values of efficiency of open photosystem II (Fv/Fm) as compared with C. glomerata from low‐light sites. Winter populations revealed higher Fv/Fm values than summer populations. A light‐induced decrease in efficiency of the closed photosystem II was observed at increasing irradiance intensities. The decrease was higher in C. glomerata from shaded sites compared with plants from open sites. Differences in the photosynthetic electron transport rate of different populations of C. glomerata were shown by photosynthesis–irradiance curves. Summer populations from high‐light sites yielded higher maximum electron transport rates than plants from low‐light sites, whereas winter populations exhibited significantly decreased values compared with the summer populations. Results of the analysis of photosynthetic pigments corresponded with data from chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. In addition to these long‐term acclimation effects, C. glomerata expressed its ability to cope with rapid changes in the light environment by the de‐epoxidation of violaxanthin during exposure to high light intensities.  相似文献   

16.
Méthy  M. 《Photosynthetica》2000,38(4):505-512
The photochemical reflectance index (PRI), based on reflectance signatures at 531 and 570 nm, and associated with xanthophyll pigment inter-conversion and related thylakoid energisation, was evaluated as an indicator of photosynthetic function in a Mediterranean holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) coppice. The chlorophyll fluorescence pulse-amplitude-modulation and the eddy correlation techniques were used to estimate the photosystem 2 photochemical efficiency of leaves and the CO2 flux over the canopy, respectively. The reflectance and fluorescence techniques yielded identical estimates of the photosynthetic activity in leaves exposed to dark-light-dark cycles or to a variable irradiance in laboratory. However, there was no such correlation between photosynthetic performance and PRI when applied to a sun-exposed canopy in field conditions. Fluorescence profiles inside the canopy and especially a helpful use of multispectral reflectance imaging highlight the limitations of such method.  相似文献   

17.
Our objective was to assess the photosynthetic responses of loblolly pine trees (Pinus taeda L.) during the first full growth season (1997) at the Brookhaven National Lab/Duke University Free Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment. Gas exchange, fluorescence characteristics, and leaf biochemistry of ambient CO2 (control) needles and ambient + 20 Pa CO2 (elevated) needles were examined five times during the year. The enhancement of photosynthesis by elevated CO2 in mature loblolly pine trees varied across the season and was influenced by abiotic and biotic factors. Photosynthetic enhancement by elevated CO2 was strongly correlated with leaf temperature. The magnitude of photosynthetic enhancement was zero in March but was as great as 52% later in the season. In March, reduced sink demand and lower temperatures resulted in lower net photosynthesis, lower carboxylation rates and higher excess energy dissipation from the elevated CO2 needles than from control needles. The greatest photosynthetic enhancement by CO2 enrichment was observed in July during a period of high temperature and low precipitation, and in September during recovery from this period of low precipitation. In July, loblolly pine trees in the control rings exhibited lower net photosynthetic rates, lower maximum rates of photosynthesis at saturating CO2 and light, lower values of carboxylation and electron transport rates (modelled from A–Ci curves), lower total Rubisco activity, and lower photochemical quenching of fluorescence in comparison to other measurement periods. During this period of low precipitation trees in the elevated CO2 rings exhibited reduced net photosynthesis and photochemical quenching of fluorescence, but there was little effect on light- and CO2-saturated rates of photosynthesis, modelled rates of carboxylation or electron transport, or Rubisco activity. These first-year data will be used to compare with similar measurements from subsequent years of the FACE experiment in order to determine whether photosynthetic acclimation to CO2 occurs in these canopy loblolly pine trees growing in a forest ecosystem.  相似文献   

18.
Spinach plunts (Spinacia oleracea L. cv. Monosa) were exposed to air with and without 0.25 μl l-1 H2S. Effects of H2S exposure for up to 18 days on photosynthesis, dark respiration and on chlorophyll a fluorescence were studied. Dark respiration was not affected by H2S fumigation. Photosynthetic CO2 fixation decreased linearly with time in both control and fumigated plants. The rate of decrease in CO2 fixation was faster in the fumigated plants; after 14 days of exposure the fumigated plants showed a decrease in CO2 fixation of 23%äs compared with the control plants. The H2S-induced decrease in CO2 fixation was accompanied by a decrease in quenching of the chlorophyll fluorescence. The most characteristic change in chlorophyll fluorescence was a decreased difference between maximum and steady-state fluorescence [(P-T)/P), suggesting a reduced efficiency in the use of photochemical energy in photosynthesis. Differences in CO2 fixation were more pronounced whcn measured at high light intensity; the maximum rate of CO2 fixation at light saturation decreased significantly with time in the H2S-exposed plants; after 14 days of H2S exposure a decrease of more than 70% was noted. The decrease in CO2 fixation could not be attributed to a decreased chlorophyll content; on the contrary, chlorophyll content even slightly increased during fumigation. The initial increase in CO2 fixation rate with increasing light intensity was also reduced by prolonged H2S fumigation, indicating an effect of H2S fumigation on photosynthetic electron transport. Finally, the phytotoxicity of H2S is discusscd in relation to the H2S-induced changes in photosynthetic CO2 fixation and chlorophyll a fluorescence, and the effect of H2S on leaf development observed in earlier studies.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of elevated growth temperature (ambient + 3.5°C) and CO2 (700 μmol mol−1) on leaf photosynthesis, pigments and chlorophyll fluorescence of a boreal perennial grass (Phalaris arundinacea L.) under different water regimes (well watered to water shortage) were investigated. Layer-specific measurements were conducted on the top (younger leaf) and low (older leaf) canopy positions of the plants after anthesis. During the early development stages, elevated temperature enhanced the maximum rate of photosynthesis (P max) of the top layer leaves and the aboveground biomass, which resulted in earlier senescence and lower photosynthesis and biomass at the later periods. At the stage of plant maturity, the content of chlorophyll (Chl), leaf nitrogen (NL), and light response of effective photochemical efficiency (ΦPSII) and electron transport rate (ETR) was significantly lower under elevated temperature than ambient temperature in leaves at both layers. CO2 enrichment enhanced the photosynthesis but led to a decline of NL and Chl content, as well as lower fluorescence parameters of ΦPSII and ETR in leaves at both layers. In addition, the down-regulation by CO2 elevation was significant at the low canopy position. Regardless of climate treatment, the water shortage had a strongly negative effect on the photosynthesis, biomass growth, and fluorescence parameters, particularly in the leaves from the low canopy position. Elevated temperature exacerbated the impact of water shortage, while CO2 enrichment slightly alleviated the drought-induced adverse effects on P max. We suggest that the light response of ΦPSII and ETR, being more sensitive to leaf-age classes, reflect the photosynthetic responses to climatic treatments and drought stress better than the fluorescence parameters under dark adaptation.  相似文献   

20.
The interactions among water content, chlorophyll a fluorescence emission, xanthophyll interconversions and net photosynthesis were analyzed during dehydration in desiccation-tolerant Frullania dilatata (L.) Dum. and desiccation-intolerant Pellia endiviifolia (Dicks) Dum. Water loss led to a progressive suppression of photosynthetic carbon assimilation in both species. Their chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics at low water content were: low photosynthetic quantum conversion efficiency, high excitation pressure on photosystem II and strong non-photochemical quenching. However, dissipation activity was lower in P. endiviifolia and was not accompanied by a rise in the concentration of de-epoxidised xanthophylls as F. dilatata. The photosynthetic apparatus of F. dilatata remained fully and speedily recuperable after desiccation in as indicated by the restoration of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters to pre-desiccation values upon rehydration. A lack of recovery upon remoistening of P. endiviifolia indicated permanent and irreversible damage to photosystem II. The results suggest that F. dilatata possesses a desiccation-induced zeaxanthin-mediated photoprotective mechanism which might aid photosynthesis recovery when favourable conditions are restored by alleviating photoinhibitory damage during desiccation. This avoidance mechanism might have evolved as an adaptative response to repeated cycles of desiccation and rehydration that represent a real threat to photosynthetic viability. Received: 12 January 1998 / Accepted: 14 July 1998  相似文献   

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