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1.
This study was designed to understand the high variability characterizing primary production rates of microphytobenthos. The photosynthetic efficiency (αB) and photosynthetic capacity (PBmax) of the microphytobenthos were measured at different times of the day on two different dates (8 May and 7 July 1990). In July, unusually low light conditions were caused by the development of a brown tide (chrysophytes). Both light-limited and light-saturated photosynthesis changed at hourly and monthly scales. There was a linear relationship between αB and PBmax, suggesting a common response to environmental factors [αB= 0.0075(±0.00063)·PBmax+ 0.00097(±0.0071), R2= 0.94]. Incident irradiance at the sediment-water interface was the primary physical factor that explained variability of both αB (84%) and PBmax (92%). Temperature had a negative but minor effect that explained an extra 8% and 2% of the variance, respectively. There was no diel rhythm of αB and PBmax and incident irradiance was regulated by wind-induced currents. Therefore, microphytobenthos photosynthesis seemed to be primarily controlled by wind events in Baffin Bay.  相似文献   

2.
Photosynthesis-irradiance (P-I) characteristics of periphyton (microphytobenthos) have been considered primarily for entire assemblages. How P-I responses vary with mat thickness and with community composition has not been considered in detail. We used a combined approach of modeling, microscale determinations of photosynthetic rate and light attenuation, and whole-assemblage O2 flux measurements to explore P-I relationships. The modeling approach suggested that the onset of photosynthetic saturation and photoinhibition will occur at higher irradiance and that whole-mat photoinhibition (decreased photosynthesis at very high irradiance), biomass-specific maximum photosynthetic rate, and initial slope of the P-I function (α) should decrease as assemblage thickness increases or light attenuation increases. Spherical light microsensor profiles for a variety of stream algae indicated a strongly compressed photic zone with attenuation coefficients of 70–1791 m?1 for scalar photosynthetic photon fluence density. The O2 microelectrode measurements showed little if any photoinhibition at 2 and 4 mm depths in one filamentous green algal (Ulothrix) assemblage, with a relatively low attenuation coefficient, and no photoinhibition in a second Ulothrix community. An assemblage dominated by a unicellular cyanobacterium exhibited little photoinhibition at 2 and 4 mm, and a dense cyanobacterial (Phormidium)/xanthophyte (Vaucheria) community exhibited no photoinhibition at all. The microelectrode data revealed increases in α over several millimeters of depth (photoacclimation). These data supported the model predictions with regard to the effects of mat optical thickness on whole-assemblage values for α and photoinhibition. Whole-community O2 flux data from 15 intact assemblages revealed positive relationships between chlorophyll a density and maximum photosynthetic rate or α expressed per unit area; the relationships with chlorophyll a were negative when photosynthetic rates were expressed per unit chlorophyll a. None of the whole assemblages exhibited photoinhibition. Thus, the data from the whole communities were consistent with model predictions.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of long term exposure to suboptimal growth temperature on the photosynthetic apparatus of Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher were investigated using carbon fixation rate versus irradiance curves and the variable fluorescence induction method. Carbon fixation rates per unite chlorophyll a at saturating (pBm) and subsaturating (αB) irradiances were 55% and 39% lower, respectively, at 12° C than at 20° C. Chlorophyll a quotas and the spectrally averaged in vivo absorption cross section normalized to chlorophyll a (a*) were not significantly different at these two temperatures. Analysis of the fluorescence kinetics revealed 1) no significant variations of the amount of PSII photoactive reaction centers per unit chlorophyll a, 2) a 14% decrease of the PSII quantum yield(+) and 3) a 29% decrease of the energy transfer efficiency between the light harvesting chlorophyll a pigment bed and the PSII reaction centers. The decrease in energy transfer efficiency between the antennae and the PSII reaction centers at 12° C was interpreted as a mechanism to avoid photoinhibition.  相似文献   

4.
Growth rate, pigment composition, and noninvasive chl a fluorescence parameters were assessed for a noncalcifying strain of the prymnesiophyte Emiliania huxleyi Lohman grown at 50, 100, 200, and 800 μmol photons·m?2·s?1. Emiliania huxleyi grown at high photon flux density (PFD) was characterized by increased specific growth rates, 0.82 d?1 for high PFD grown cells compared with 0.38 d?1 for low PFD grown cells, and higher in vivo chl a specific attenuation coefficients that were most likely due to a decreased pigment package, consistent with the observed decrease in cellular photosynthetic pigment content. High PFD growth conditions also induced a 2.5‐fold increase in the pool of the xanthophyll cycle pigments diadinoxanthin and diatoxanthin responsible for dissipation of excess energy. Dark‐adapted maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) remained constant at around 0.58 for cells grown over the range of PFDs, and therefore the observed decline, from 0.57 to 0.33, in the PSII maximum efficiency in the light‐adapted state, (Fv′/Fm′), with increasing growth PFD was due to increased dissipation of excess energy, most likely via the xanthophyll cycle and not due to photoinhibition. The PSII operating efficiency (Fq′/Fm′) decreased from 0.48 to 0.21 with increasing growth PFD due to both saturation of photochemistry and an increase in nonphotochemical quenching. The changes in the physiological parameters with growth PFD enable E. huxleyi to maximize rates of photosynthesis under subsaturating conditions and protect the photosynthetic apparatus from excess energy while supporting higher saturating rates of photosynthesis under saturating PFDs.  相似文献   

5.
N. Goto  O. Mitamura  H. Terai 《Limnology》2000,1(2):133-138
Seasonal variations in photosynthetic rates by microphytobenthos and phytoplankton at the Isshiki tidal flat in Mikawa Bay were measured with a 14C combustion method. In addition, diurnal variations in the photosynthetic rate and photosynthesis versus irradiance (P-I) curves were obtained through in situ incubation. The photosynthetic rate of microphytobenthos (annual average, 13.9 ± 6.4 mg C m−2 h−1) did not show a remarkable change, and they maintained a higher production rate than phytoplankton (annual average 9.0 ± 5.1 mg C m−2 h−1) throughout the year. The P-I curves from in situ experiments showed that the photosynthetic activity of microphytobenthos at the laboratory irradiance (250 μE m−2 s−1) was 56% of that at the maximum irradiance (1200 μE m−2 s−1) in situ. In the in situ experiments, the chlorophyll a concentration, photosynthetic rate, and activity of microphytobenthos varied greatly throughout the day, influenced by tidal submersion/emersion and daylight. From an analysis of these results, it is considered that microphytobenthos contributed greatly to primary production in this ecosystem throughout the year by adapting suitably to intertidal environments. Received: July 28, 1999 / Accepted: October 10, 1999  相似文献   

6.
Growth, dark respiration rate, photosynthetic parameters, and chemical composition were determined for Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay et Mohler acclimated to different combinations of day length (12, 18, 24 h) and irradiance (30, 100, 200, 800 μmol·m−2·s−1). Specific growth rate (μ, day−1) and carbon-specific dark respiration rate (rCd, day−1) were independent of day length, but increased significantly with increasing irradiance. The photosynthetic parameters depended on the initial acclimation day length and irradiance: Chlorophyll a-specific maximum photosynthetic rate (PmB) increased up to threefold with decreasing day length and twofold with increasing irradiance. The maximum light utilization coefficient (αB) and maximum quantum yield (φm) increased up to threefold with decreasing day length. αB increased almost four-fold with decreasing irradiance, whereas φm was independent of irradiance. Literature data for phytoplankton indicate that PmB consistently increases with increasing irradiance, and day length-irradiance responses of αB and φm are species specific. Results from the present experiment and other studies indicate that if day length-irradiance variability in the photosynthetic parameters are neglected, this may cause an over- or underestimation up to a factor of two in the photosynthetic rate estimation based on these parameters.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this study was to investigate acclimation of micropropagated plants of Rhododendron ponticum subsp. baeticum to different irradiances and recovery after exposure to high irradiance. Plants grown under high (HL) or intermediate (IL) irradiances displayed higher values of maximum electron transport rate (ETRmax) and light saturation coefficient (Ek) than plants grown under low irradiance (LL). The capacity of tolerance to photoinhibition (as assessed by the response of photochemical quenching, qp) varied as follows: HL > IL > LL. Thermal energy dissipation (qN) was also affected by growth irradiance, with higher saturating values being observed in HL plants. Light-response curves suggested a gradual replacement of qp by qN with increasing irradiance. Following exposure to irradiance higher than 1500 μmol m−2 s−1, a prolonged reduction of the maximal photochemical efficiency of PS 2 (Fv/Fm) was observed in LL plants, indicating the occurrence of chronic photoinhibition. In contrary, the decrease in Fv/Fm was quickly reverted in HL plants, pointing to a reversible photoinhibition.  相似文献   

8.
D. H. Greer  W. A. Laing 《Planta》1989,180(1):32-39
Intact leaves of kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa (A. Chev.) C.F. Liang et A.R. Ferguson) from plants grown in a range of controlled temperatures from 15/10 to 30/25°C were exposed to a photon flux density (PFD) of 1500 μmol·m−2·s−1 at leaf temperatures between 10 and 25°C. Photoinhibition and recovery were followed at the same temperatures and at a PFD of 20 μmol·m−2·s−1, by measuring chlorophyll fluorescence at 77 K and 692 nm, by measuring the photon yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution and light-saturated net photosynthetic CO2 uptake. The growth of plants at low temperatures resulted in chronic photoinhibition as evident from reduced fluorescence and photon yields. However, low-temperature-grown plants apparently had a higher capacity to dissipate excess excitation energy than leaves from plants grown at high temperatures. Induced photoinhibition, from exposure to a PFD above that during growth, was less severe in low-temperature-grown plants, particularly at high exposure temperatures. Net changes in the instantaneous fluorescence,F 0, indicated that little or no photoinhibition occurred when low-temperature-grown plants were exposed to high-light at high temperatures. In contrast, high-temperature-grown plants were highly susceptible to photoinhibitory damage at all exposure temperatures. These data indicate acclimation in photosynthesis and changes in the capacity to dissipate excess excitation energy occurred in kiwifruit leaves with changes in growth temperature. Both processes contributed to changes in susceptibility to photoinhibition at the different growth temperatures. However, growth temperature also affected the capacity for recovery, with leaves from plants grown at low temperatures having moderate rates of recovery at low temperatures compared with leaves from plants grown at high temperatures which had negligible recovery. This also contributed to the reduced susceptibility to photoinhibition in low-temperature-grown plants. However, extreme photoinhibition resulted in severe reductions in the efficiency and capacity for photosynthesis.  相似文献   

9.
This study investigated the influence of light on the distributional limits of Bostrychia scorpioides and Catenella caespitosa within a low amplitude intertidal zonation in the Palmones estuary, Spain. Changes in photosynthesis- and growth-irradiance curves and pigment content were examined ex situ at irradiances found in their natural habitat (10–230 µmol photons m?2 s?1). The highest maximum photosynthesis rate (Pm) and photosynthetic efficiency (α) were found between 20–40 µmol photons m?2 s?1 in both species. Bostrychia scorpioides, the uppermost intertidal species, had a higher Pm, α, dark respiration rate and light compensation point (Ec) than C. caespitosa at all acclimation irradiances. Net photosynthetic rates measured at their respective acclimation irradiances showed photosynthetic responses of B. scorpioides to be maximized at high irradiances, while in C. caespitosa they did not change. Higher growth rates were obtained in C. caespitosa than in B. scorpioides, which may be related to its lower thallus specific carbon content. When irradiance decreased, the chlorophyll a content of B. scorpioides increased whereas in C. caespitosa R-phycoerythrin increased. Ec for growth of B. scorpioides coincided with the irradiance at its lower distributional limit in the estuary, below which this species showed losses in biomass. However, in C. caespitosa the sustained growth ex situ at saturating irradiances contrasts with its absence from the upper intertidal zone, where similar light regimes occur. We demonstrated that while light clearly restricts the growth of B. scorpioides to the uppermost intertidal zone, this environmental factor would not prevent C. caespitosa from growing at higher levels.  相似文献   

10.
The photosynthesis‐irradiance response (PE) curve, in which mass‐specific photosynthetic rates are plotted versus irradiance, is commonly used to characterize photoacclimation. The interpretation of PE curves depends critically on the currency in which mass is expressed. Normalizing the light‐limited rate to chl a yields the chl a‐specific initial slope (αchl). This is proportional to the light absorption coefficient (achl), the proportionality factor being the photon efficiency of photosynthesis (φm). Thus, αchl is the product of achl and φm. In microalgae αchl typically shows little (<20%) phenotypic variability because declines of φm under conditions of high‐light stress are accompanied by increases of achl. The variation of αchl among species is dominated by changes in achl due to differences in pigment complement and pigment packaging. In contrast to the microalgae, αchl declines as irradiance increases in the cyanobacteria where phycobiliproteins dominate light absorption because of plasticity in the phycobiliprotein:chl a ratio. By definition, light‐saturated photosynthesis (Pm) is limited by a factor other than the rate of light absorption. Normalizing Pm to organic carbon concentration to obtain PmC allows a direct comparison with growth rates. Within species, PmC is independent of growth irradiance. Among species, PmC covaries with the resource‐saturated growth rate. The chl a:C ratio is a key physiological variable because the appropriate currencies for normalizing light‐limited and light‐saturated photosynthetic rates are, respectively, chl a and carbon. Typically, chl a:C is reduced to about 40% of its maximum value at an irradiance that supports 50% of the species‐specific maximum growth rate and light‐harvesting accessory pigments show similar or greater declines. In the steady state, this down‐regulation of pigment content prevents microalgae and cyanobacteria from maximizing photosynthetic rates throughout the light‐limited region for growth. The reason for down‐regulation of light harvesting, and therefore loss of potential photosynthetic gain at moderately limiting irradiances, is unknown. However, it is clear that maximizing the rate of photosynthetic carbon assimilation is not the only criterion governing photoacclimation.  相似文献   

11.
Exposure to high temperatures affects the photosynthetic processes in marine benthic microalgae by limiting the transport of electrons, thus reducing the ability of the cell to use light. This causes damage to the Photosystem II (PSII) and may lead to photoinhibition. However, the PSII of benthic microalgal communities from Brown Bay, eastern Antarctica, were relatively unaffected by significant changes in temperature. Benthic microalgae exposed to temperatures up to 8°C and an irradiance of 450 μmol photons m−2 s−1 did not experience any photosynthetic damage or irreversible photoinhibition. The effective quantum yield (∆F/F m′) at 8°C (0.433 ± 0.042) was higher by comparison to cell incubated at −0.1°C (0.373 ± 0.015) with similar irradiances. Temperatures down to −5°C at a similar irradiance showed a decrease in photosynthesis with decreasing temperature, but no severe photoinhibition as the cells were able to dissipate excess energy via non-photochemical quenching and recover from damage. These responses are consistent with those recorded in past studies on Antarctic benthic microalgae and suggest that short-term temperature change (from −5 to 8°C) will not do irreversible damage to the PSII and will not affect the photosynthesis of the benthic microalgae.  相似文献   

12.
Two populations of a diatom alga Thallassiosira weisflogii were grown at photon flux densities (PFD) of 0.8 and 8 μmol/(m2 s). For both diatom populations, the recovery of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters (F 0, F m, F v/F m, and NPQ) was monitored after nondestructive irradiation by visible light at PFD of 40 μmol/(m2 s) and after high-intensity irradiation by visible light (1000–4000 μmol/(m2 s)). The exposure of diatoms to PFD of 40 μmol/(m2 s)—higher than PFD used for algal growth but still nondamaging to photosynthetic apparatus—induced nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ), which was stronger in algae grown at higher PFD (8 μmol/(m2 s)) than in algae grown at low light. After irradiation with high-intensity light, the recovery of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters was more pronounced in algae grown at elevated PFD level. During short-term irradiation of diatoms with high-intensity visible light (1000 μmol/(m2 s)), a stronger NPQ was observed in the culture adapted to high irradiance. After the treatment of algae with dithiothreitol (an inhibitor of carotenoid deepoxidase in the diadinoxanthin cycle) or NH4Cl (an agent abolishing the proton gradient at thylakoid membranes), a short exposure of algae to PFD of 40 μmol/(m2 s) induced hardly any nonphotochemical quenching. The results indicate the dominant contribution of xanthophyll cycle carotenoids to energy-dependent quenching.  相似文献   

13.
The photosynthetic capabilities of the fern Pteris cretica var. ouvrardii were analysed by means of the light response curves of CO2 exchange. In control growth conditions (greenhouse, low-light: 20–32 W m?2); photosynthesis was shown to be saturated for low irradiance (20–25 W m?2); the saturating photosynthetic rate, very low as compared to higher plants, was due to an extremely high intracellular resistance. When irradiance during the photosynthesis measurement was higher than 60–80 W m?2, a constant decline of net CO2 exchange as a function of time was observed. When irradiance during growth was enhanced, whether in greenhouse (20–250 W m?2) or controlled (62 W m?2) conditions, the first fronds that had developed in the new condition from the crosier stage exhibited decreased net maximal photosynthesis and a decreased efficiency in low light, but saturating irradiance was unmodified. However, the fronds whose entire differentiation (from meristem) occurred under these moderate irradiances (plants defoliated of all fronds and crosiers at the time of transfer), possessed more efficient photosynthetic characteristics than control plants. Pteris is able to grow under extreme shade conditions (4–8 W m?2); light saturating photosynthesis and efficiency are higher under extreme shade than under control conditions. These adaptive characteristics indicate that Pteris is a well-adapted shade species.  相似文献   

14.
Temperature and irradiance are the most important factors affecting marine benthic microalgal photosynthetic rates in temperate intertidal areas. Two temperate benthic diatoms species, Amphora cf. coffeaeformis (C. Agardh) Kütz. and Cocconeis cf. sublittoralis Hendey, were investigated to determine how their photosynthesis responded to temperatures ranging from 5°C to 50°C after short‐term exposure (1 h) to a range of irradiance levels (0, 500, and 1,100 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1). Significant differences were observed between the temperature responses of maximum relative electron transport rate (rETRmax), photoacclimation index (Ek), photosynthetic efficiency (α), and effective quantum yield (ΔF/Fm’) in both species. A. coffeaeformis had a greater tolerance to higher temperatures than C. sublittoralis, with nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) activated at temperatures of 45°C and 50°C. C. sublittoralis, however, demonstrated a more rapid rate of recovery at ambient temperatures. Temperatures between 10°C and 20°C were determined to be optimal for photosynthesis for both species. High temperatures and irradiances caused a greater decrease in ΔF/Fm’ values. These results suggest that the effects of temperature are species specific and that short‐term exposure to adverse temperature slows the recovery process, which subsequently leads to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

15.
As a result of ozone depletion, ground doses of ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation in the mid latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere have increased since the 1980s, and current predictions indicate no possible alleviation until at least post 2020. Mudflats and sandflats are important coastal-zone habitats, and support extensive biofilms of benthic microalgae (microphytobenthos). In intertidal situations, these assemblages are exposed to high levels of UVB radiation during periods of tidal exposure. Exposure of intertidal biofilms dominated by epipelic (mud-inhabiting) diatoms to 0, 0.18 or 0.35 W m−2 UVB radiation for between 4 and 10 days resulted in no significant decreases in the maximum PSII quantum efficiency (Fv/Fm) throughout diel exposure periods. Although the quantum efficiency of electron transport (Fq′/Fm′) showed significant reductions early in some experiments, the major response was an increase in Fq′/Fm′ in UVB exposed biofilms. This increase in Fq′/Fm′ was suggestive of a protective vertical migration down into the sediment. Single-cell and whole biofilm fluorescence imaging demonstrated, for the first time, that motile diatoms are able to detect UVB radiation independently of UVA or photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and migrate rapidly down (within 15 min) into the sediments to avoid it. This behavioural acclimation mechanism appears to prevent significant accumulation of UVB induced damage to the algae. UVB exposure had no significant effect of biofilm photosynthesis (measured by 14C carbon fixation), but did alter organic carbon allocation patterns, with significantly less new carbon allocated to intracellular storage (glucan) and extracellular colloidal carbohydrate fractions. Significant reductions in the sediment standing stocks of chlorophyll a (Chl a), colloidal carbohydrates, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) were seen after 7 days of UVB exposure. This study showed that marine intertidal benthic diatoms use a behavioural strategy to avoid exposure to UVB and that this response is effective as a short-term protection mechanism against UVB damage. However, altered carbon allocation patterns feed forward over time into changes in biofilm biomass and sediment carbohydrate dynamics. This suggests that continual long-term exposure to UVB may impact on sediment carbon cycling and trophic interactions and on the stabilization of sediments by microalgal biofilms through their production of extracellular carbohydrates.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of strong light in combination with elevated temperatures on the photosynthetic system were examined in 4 dipterocarp tree species with ecologically different habitats. The 4 dipterocarp tree species were: Shorea platyclados originated from upper dipterocarp forests, Shorea parvifolia– lowland and hill dipterocarp forests, Shorea assamica– lowland dipterocarp forests, and Dipterocarpus oblongifolius– riparian fringes. S. platyclados and D. oblongifolius have higher growth and survival rates in open sites than S. parvifolia and S. assamica. Tolerance of high temperature among the species was assessed by determining the critical temperatures (Tc) at which the minimal fluorescence (Fo) began to rise sharply. This was measured by exposing plants to an increasing temperature of about 1°C min?1. The intrinsic thermotolerance of the thylakoid membrane appears to be the highest for D. oblongifolius (Tc=46.4°C), intermediate for S. platyclados (45.7°C), and lowest for S. parvifolia and S. assamica (45.2 and 45.3°C, respectively). The temperature‐dependent efficiency of PSII electron transport (ΔF/F′m), photochemical quenching (qP), and the efficiency of light capture of open PSII (F′v/F′m) were measured at the photosynthetic steady state at least 10 min after the light exposure (180 μmol m?2 s?1 PFD). Stable temperature responses of ΔF/F′m and qP were observed in S. platyclados and D. oblongifolius, while those in S. parvifolia and S. assamica were more temperature‐dependent and severely affected at 45°C. Little difference was observed in temperature‐dependent F′v/F′m among species. Photoinhibitory light exposure (1600 μmol m?2 s?1 PFD) for 2 h at 40°C had little effect on the recovery kinetics from photoinhibition of S. platyclados and D. oblongifolius compared with those at 35°C. In contrast, the recovery from photoinhibition was retarded in S. parvifolia and S. assamica. These findings suggest that even at 40°C, a temperature below Tc, an exposure to strong light exacerbated photoinhibition in S. parvifolia and S. assamica corresponding to the closure of PSII reaction centers, as indicated by the decrease in qP at this temperature. Thus, S. platyclados and D. oblongifolius, which occur at uplands and riparian fringes with frequent disturbances, are suggested to have higher photosynthetic tolerance to elevated temperatures contributing to a circumvention of photoinhibition.  相似文献   

17.
The susceptibility to photoinhibition of tree species from three different successional stages were examined using chlorophyll fluorescence and gas exchange techniques. The three deciduous broadleaf tree species were Betula platyphylla var. japonica, pioneer and early successional, Quercus mongolica, intermediate shade‐tolerant and mid‐successional, and Acer mono, shade‐tolerant and late successional. Tree seedlings were raised under three light regimes: full sunlight (open), 10% full sun, and 5% full sun. Susceptibility to photoinhibition was assessed on the basis of the recovery kinetics of the ratio of vaviable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) of detached leaf discs exposed to about 2000 μmol m?1 s?1 photon flux density (PFD) for 2 h under controlled conditions (25 to 28 °C, fully hydrated). Differences in susceptibility to photodamage among species were not significant in the open and 10% full sun treatments. But in 5% full sun, B. platyphylla sustained a significantly greater photodamage than other species, probably associated with having the lowest photosynthetic capacity indicated by light‐saturated photosynthetic rate (B. platyphylla, 9·87, 5·85 and 2·82; Q. mongolica, 8·05, 6·28 and 4·41; A. mono, 7·93, 6·11 and 5·08 μmol CO2 m?1 s?1for open, 10% and 5% full sun, respectively). To simulate a gap formation and assess its complex effects including high temperature and water stress in addition to strong light on the susceptibility to photoinhibition, we examined photoinhibition in the field by means of monitoring ΔF/Fm on the first day of transfer to natural daylight. Compared with ΔF/Fm in AM, the lower ΔF/Fm in PM responding to lower PFD following high PFD around noon indicated that photoinhibition occurred in plants grown in 10 and 5% full sun. The diurnal changes of ΔF/Fm showed that Q. mongolica grown in 5% full sun was less susceptible to photoinhibition than A. mono although they showed little differences both in photosynthetic capacity in intact leaves and susceptibility to photoinhibition based on leaf disc measurements. These results suggest that shade‐grown Q. mongolica had a higher tolerance for additional stresses such as high temperature and water stress in the field, possibly due to their lower plasticity in leaf anatomy to low light environment.  相似文献   

18.
Synechococcus sp. (PTCC 6021), a cyanobacterium species, was cultivated in an internally illuminated photobioreactor. The reactor was designed to achieve a monoseptic cultivation of the species. The goal was to study the growth–irradiance behavior of Synechococcus sp. (PTCC 6021). To accomplish this, different initial light irradiances were implemented inside the photobioreactor and the growth of the cells was monitored. It was observed that cell growth increased with higher light intensity until the photoinhibition occurrence at light irradiance higher than 250?μE?m?2?s?1. The maximum OD600, maximum growth rate, and biomass productivity increased, and hence the extinction coefficient decreased, with the increase in light irradiance before photoinhibition. The maximum optical density (OD600) of 5.91 was obtained with irradiance below 250?μE?m?2?s?1 during a growth period of 80 days. The modified Monod function could model the growth–irradiance of cells with satisfactory agreement with the experimental data. The comparison of growth–irradiance of the studied species with other photosynthetic organisms showed the same trend as for cyanobacteria with photoinhibition.  相似文献   

19.
This work describes the long-term acclimation of the halotolerant microalga Dunaliella viridis to different photon irradiance, ranging from darkness to 1500 μmol m−2 s−1. In order to assess the effects of long-term photoinhibition, changes in oxygen production rate, pigment composition, xanthophyll cycle and in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence using the saturating pulse method were measured. Growth rate was maximal at intermediate irradiance (250 and 700 μmol m−2 s−1). The increase in growth irradiance from 700 to 1500 μmol m−2 s−1 did not lead to further significant changes in pigment composition or EPS, indicating saturation in the pigment response to high light. Changes in Photosystem II optimum quantum yield (Fv/Fm) evidenced photoinhibition at 700 and especially at 1500 μmol m−2 s−1. The relation between photosynthetic electron flow rate and photosyntetic O2 evolution was linear for cultures in darkness shifting to curvilinear as growth irradiance increased, suggesting the interference of the energy dissipation processes in oxygen evolution. Carbon assimilation efficiencies were studied in relation to changes in growth rate, internal carbon and nitrogen composition, and organic carbon released to the external medium. All illuminated cultures showed a high capability to maintain a C:N ratio between 6 and 7. The percentage of organic carbon released to the external medium increased to its maximum under high irradiance (1500 μmol m−2 s−1). These results suggest that the release of organic carbon could act as a secondary dissipation process when the xanthophyll cycle is saturated. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Due to the periodic exposure to air during periods of low tide, desiccation can be expected to cause important limiting effects on the photosynthetic activity of intertidal microphytobenthos biofilms. This work addresses the study of the short-term effects of desiccation on microphytobenthos using a new, simple methodological approach to non-destructively estimate the water content of muddy intertidal sediments. The method is based on the non-destructive measurement of the specular reflectance in the visible spectral region, shown to be linearly related to the water content of the uppermost 200 µm of the sediment. During air exposure, water loss by the surface sediment layers was shown to induce marked decreases in both the photosynthetic activity, as measured by the maximum quantum yield of photosystem II, Fv/Fm, and the surface microalgal biomass, as estimated from the diffusive reflectance biomass index NDVI. The effects of desiccation were largely dependent on the rate of sediment de-watering. For a same level of desiccation, samples under fast desiccation (exposed to wind of 4.2 m s− 1) showed much larger effects on Fv/Fm and NDVI comparatively to samples under slow desiccation (maintained under still air). By showing the rapid and significant effects of desiccation on microphytobenthos biofilm functioning, the results of this study have potentially important implications for the modelling of primary productivity of estuarine intertidal areas, as desiccation and factors inducing it may result in previously unaccounted effects on photosynthetic performance and productive biomass.  相似文献   

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