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Leaf anatomical responses to light in five tropical moraceae of different successional status
Authors:S Strauss-Debenedetti  G P Berlyn
Institution:School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 06511
Abstract:We characterized the leaf anatomical characteristics and maximum assimilation rates of five neotropical Moraceae of different genera and successional positions. Plants were grown under different light levels and transferred to high light, simulating canopy openings. Total blade thickness increased with irradiance among all species, and thicker blades were developed when plants were switched. However, blade thickness, and the extent to which it was modified, was independent of the species’ successional position and did not predict photosynthetic performance. Palisade thickness was a good predictor of maximum photosynthetic rate, but only on a species-specific basis. Overall, leaf thickening with increasing irradiance was associated more with structural than with photosynthetic changes. The early successionals Cecropia obtusifolia and Ficus insipida exhibited similarly high photosynthetic plasticity and acclimation values, but differed in their leaf anatomical traits. The late successional Poulsenia armata produced the most anatomically plastic leaves, but failed to acclimate either anatomically or photosynthetically when transferred to higher light levels.
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