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1.
Measurements of gas exchange characteristics were made on intact, attached leaves of hydroponically grown seedlings of Avicennia marina (Forstk.) Vierh. var australasica (Walp.) Moldenke as the NaCl concentration of the culture solution was varied by step changes of 50 millimolar NaCl every 2nd day from 50 to 500 to 50 millimolar NaCl. The CO2 assimilation rate, stomatal conductance, intercellular CO2 concentration, and evaporation rate decreased at salinities above 250 millimolar NaCl and recovered substantially upon return to the original salinity.

The assimilation rate was measured as a function of the intercellular CO2 concentration [A(ci) curve]. The lower linear portion of this curve was insensitive to variation in salinity, whereas the upper nonlinear portion declined with increasing salinity, indicating a reduction in the capacity for CO2 assimilation which recovered upon return to the original salinity. Stomatal conductance changed such that the intercellular CO2 concentration measured under normal atmospheric conditions occurred in the transition between the lower, linear and upper nonlinear portions of the A(ci) curve. Thus, stomatal conductance and photosynthetic capacity together co-limited the assimilation rate. The changes in gas exchange characteristics were such that water loss was minimal relative to carbon gain.

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2.
Gas exchange characteristics were studied in two mangrove species, Aegiceras corniculatum (L.) Blanco and Avicennia marina (Forstk.) Vierh. var australasica (Walp.) Moldenke, grown under a variety of salinity and humidity conditions. The assimilation rate was measured as a function of the intercellular CO2 concentration [A(ci) curve]. The photosynthetic capacity decreased with increase in salinity from 50 to 500 millimolar NaCl, as shown by decline in both the initial linear slope and the upper plateau of the A(ci) curve, with A. corniculatum being the more sensitive species. The decline in photosynthetic capacity was enhanced by increase in the leaf to air vapor pressure difference from 6 to 24 millibars, but this treatment caused a decrease in only the upper plateau of the A(ci) curve. Stomatal conductance was such that the intercellular CO2 concentration obtaining under normal atmospheric conditions occurred near the transition between the lower linear and upper plateau portions of the A(ci) curves. Thus, stomatal conductance and photosynthetic capacity together co-limited the assimilation rate, which declined with increasing salinity and decreasing humidity. The marginal water cost of carbon assimilation was similar in most treatments, despite variation in the water loss/carbon gain ratio.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of increased salinity on photosynthesis was studied in leaves of Plantago maritima L. that developed while plants were at low and high NaCl levels. In leaves that developed while plants were grown at 50 mol·m-3, exposure to 200 and 350 mol·m-3 NaCl resulted in reductions in net CO2 assimilation and stomatal conductance. The decline in CO2 assimilation in plants at 200 and 350 mol·m-3 NaCl occurred almost exclusively at high intercellular CO2 concentrations. The initial slope of the CO2 assimilation-intercellular CO2 (A-C i) curve, determined after salinity was increased, was identical or very similar to that measured initially. In contrast to the reductions observed in CO2 assimilation, there were no significant differences in O2 evolution rates measured at 5% CO2 among leaves from plants exposed to higher salinity and plants remaining at low salinity.Leaves that developed while plants were at increased salinity levels also had significantly lower net CO2 assimilation rates than plants remaining at 50 mol·m-3 NaCl. The lower CO2 assimilation rates in plants grown at 200 and 350 mol·m-3 NaCl were a result of reduced stomatal conductance and low intercellular CO2 concentration. There were no significant differences among treatments for O2 evolution rates measured at high CO2 levels. The increased stomatal limitation of photosynthesis was confirmed by measurements of the 13C/12C composition of leaf tissue. Water-use efficiency was increased in the plants grown at high salinity.Abbreviations and symbols A net CO2 assimilation rate - C a ambient CO2 concentration - C i intercellular CO2 concentration - 13C isotopic ratio (13C/12C) expressed relative to a standard - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

4.
The effects of salinity on growth, stomatal conductance, photosynthetic capacity, and carbon isotope discrimination (Δ) of Gossypium hirsutum L. and Phaseolus vulgaris L. were evaluated. Plants were grown at different NaCl concentrations from 10 days old until mature reproductive structures were formed. Plant growth and leaf area development were strongly reduced by salinity, in both cotton and bean. Stomatal conductance also was reduced by salinity. The Δ always declined with increasing external salinity concentration, indicating that stomatal limitation of photosynthesis was increased. In cotton plant dry matter, Δ correlated with the ratio of intercellular to atmospheric CO2 partial pressures (pl/pa) calculated by gas exchange. This correlation was not clear in bean plants, although Δ showed a more pronounced salt induced decline in bean than in cotton. Possible effects of heterogeneity of stomatal aperture and consequent overestimation of pl as determined from gas exchange could explain these results. Significant differences of Δ between leaf and seed material were observed in cotton and bean. This suggests different patterns of carbon allocation between leaves and seeds. The photon yield of O2 evolution determined at rate-limiting photosynthetic photon flux density was insensitive to salinity in both species analyzed. The light- and CO2-saturated rate of CO2 uptake and O2 evolution showed a salt induced decline in both species. Possible explanations of this observation are discussed. O2 hypersensitivity was observed in salt stressed cotton plants. These results clearly demonstrate that the effect of salinity on assimilation rate was mostly due to the reduction of stomatal conductance, and that calculation of pl may be overestimated in salt stressed plants, because of heterogeneity of stomatal aperture over the leaf surface.  相似文献   

5.
The influence of short-term salinity (day 1–day 2: 50 mol m–3 NaCl, day 3–day 7: 100 mol m–3 NaCl in the nutrient solution) on leaf gas exchange characteristics were studied in two fig clones (Ficus carica L.), whose root mass had been varied in relation to the leaf area. The stomatal conductance was diminished by NaCl in the first week of treatment. NaCl slightly reduced the calculated intercellular partial pressure of CO2. The net photosynthetic rate of plants with many roots was stimulated by NaCl on some days of the first week of treatment, whereas the net assimilation rate of the plants with few roots remained unaltered or decreased by NaCl. Only the assimilation of the salt-treated plants of one clone for some days during the first week of treatment seemed to be influenced by stomatal conductance. Nonstomatal factors were primarily responsible for the changes in CO2 uptake in response to salt and/or root treatment. The water use efficiency increased during several days of the first week of NaCl treatment. Decreased stomatal conductance, increased water use efficiency and stimualtion of the net CO2 assimilation rate appear to enhance salt tolerance during the first few days of salinity. ei]H Lambers  相似文献   

6.
The importance of reduced leaf conductance (stomatal and boundary layer) in limiting photosynthetic rates during water stress was studied in Encelia frutescens, a drought-deciduous leaved subshrub of the Mohave and Sonoran Deserts. Light-saturated CO2 assimilation rates of greenhouse grown plants decreased from 42.6±1.6mol CO2 m-2 s-1 (x±s.e.) to 1.7±1.7 mol CO2 m-2s-1 as leaf water potential decreased from-1.5 MPa to-4.0 MPa. The dependence of light saturated, CO2 assimilation rate on leaf intercellular CO2 concentrations between 60 and 335 l l-1 was also determined as leaf water potential decline. This enabled us to compare the effects of leaf water potentials on limitations to carbon assimilation imposed by leaf conductance and by intrinsic photosynthetic capacity. Both leaf conductance and intrinsic photosynthetic capacity decreased with decreasing leaf water potential, but the decrease in leaf conductance was proportionately greater. The relative stomatal limitation, defined as the percent limitation in photosynthetic rate due to the presence of gas-phase diffusional barriers, increased from (x±s.e.) to 41±3% as water potentials became more negative. Since both leaf conductance and intrinsic photosynthetic capacity were severely reduced in an absolute sense, however, high photosynthetic rates could not have been restored at low leaf water potentials without simultaneous increases in both components.  相似文献   

7.
The relationship between stomatal conductance and capacity for assimilation was investigated in flacca, a mutant of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) that has abnormal stomatal behavior and low abscisic acid (ABA) content. The assimilation capacity, determined by measuring assimilation rate as a function of intercellular CO2 pressure, did not differ in leaves of flacca and its parent variety, Rheinlands Ruhm (RR). On the other hand, stomatal conductance of flacca leaves was greater than that of RR, and could be phenotypically reverted by spraying with 30 micromolar ABA. Stomatal conductance of flacca leaves was also reduced by increasing CO2 pressure, increasing leaf to air vapor pressure difference, and decreasing quantum flux, irrespective of ABA treatment.

The high conductance of flacca leaves resulted in a high intercellular CO2 pressure. This allowed greater discrimination against 13CO2, as evidenced by more negative δ 13C values for flacca as compared to RR. The δ 13C values of both flacca and RR plants as influenced by ABA treatment were consistent with predictions based on gas exchange measurements, using a recent model of discrimination.

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8.
Klaus Raschke  Rainer Hedrich 《Planta》1985,163(1):105-118
(±)-Abscisic acid (ABA) at 10-5 M was added to the transpiration stream of leaves of 16 species (C3 and C4, monocotyledons and dicotyledons). Stomatal responses followed one of three patterns: i) stomata that were wide and insensitive to CO2 initially, closed partially and became sensitive to CO2; ii) for stomata that were sensitive to CO2 before the application of ABA, the range of highest sensitivity to CO2 shifted from high to low intercellular partial pressures of CO2, for instance in leaves of Zea mays from 170–350 to 70–140 bar; iii) when stomata responded strongly to ABA, their conductance was reduced to a small fraction of the initial conductance, and sensitivity to CO2 was lost. The photosynthetic apparatus was affected by applications of ABA to various degrees, from no response at all (in agreement with several previous reports on the absence of effects of ABA on photosynthesis) through a temporary decrease of its activity to a lasting reduction. Saturation curves of photosynthesis with respect to the partial pressure of CO2 in the intercellular spaces indicated that application of ABA could produce three phenomena: i) a reduction of the initial slope of the saturation curve (which indicates a diminished carboxylation efficiency); ii) a reduction of the level of the CO2-saturated rate of assimilation (which indicates a reduction of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate regeneration capacity); and iii) an increase of the CO2 compensation point. Photosynthesis of isolated mesophyll cells was not affected by ABA treatments. Responses of the stomatal and photosynthetic apparatus were usually synchronous and often proportional to each other, with the result that the partial pressure of CO2 in the intercellular spaces frequently remained constant in spite of large changes in conductance and assimilation rate. Guard cells and the photosynthetic apparatus were able to recover from effects of ABA applications while the ABA supply continued. Recovery was usually partial, in the case of the photosynthetic apparatus occasionally complete. Abscisic acid did not cause stomatal closure or decreases in the rate of photosynthesis when it was applied during a phase of stomatal opening and induction of photosynthesis that followed a transition from darkness to light.Abbreviations and symbols A rate of CO2 assimilation - ABA (±)-abscisic acid - c a partial pressure of CO2 in the ambient air or in the gas supplied to the leaf chambers - c i partial pressure of CO2 in the intercellular spaces of a leaf - e a partial pressure of H2O in the air - g conductance for water vapor - J quantum flux - T 1 leaf temperature  相似文献   

9.
Native scrub‐oak communities in Florida were exposed for three seasons in open top chambers to present atmospheric [CO2] (approx. 350 μmol mol?1) and to high [CO2] (increased by 350 μmol mol?1). Stomatal and photosynthetic acclimation to high [CO2] of the dominant species Quercus myrtifolia was examined by leaf gas exchange of excised shoots. Stomatal conductance (gs) was approximately 40% lower in the high‐ compared to low‐[CO2]‐grown plants when measured at their respective growth concentrations. Reciprocal measurements of gs in both high‐ and low‐[CO2]‐grown plants showed that there was negative acclimation in the high‐[CO2]‐grown plants (9–16% reduction in gs when measured at 700 μmol mol?1), but these were small compared to those for net CO2 assimilation rate (A, 21–36%). Stomatal acclimation was more clearly evident in the curve of stomatal response to intercellular [CO2] (ci) which showed a reduction in stomatal sensitivity at low ci in the high‐[CO2]‐grown plants. Stomatal density showed no change in response to growth in high growth [CO2]. Long‐term stomatal and photosynthetic acclimation to growth in high [CO2] did not markedly change the 2·5‐ to 3‐fold increase in gas‐exchange‐derived water use efficiency caused by high [CO2].  相似文献   

10.
Young, visually symptomless leaves from potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants infected with Verticillium dahliae exhibited reduced carbon assimilation rate, stomatal conductance, and intercellular CO2, but no increase in dark respiration, no change in the relationship between carbon assimilation rate versus intercellular CO2, and no change in light use efficiency when intercellular CO2 was held constant. Therefore, the initial decrease in photosynthesis caused by V. dahliae was caused by stomatal closure. Errors in the intercellular CO2 calculation caused by uneven distribution of carbon assimilation rate across the leaf were tested by 14CO2 autoradiography. Patchiness was found at a low frequency. Low stomatal conductance was correlated with low leaf water potentials. Infection did not affect leaf osmotic potentials.  相似文献   

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