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1.
We investigated the effect of photosynthetic electron transport and of the photosystem II (PSII) chlorophyll (Chl) antenna size on the rate of PSII photoinhibitory damage. To modulate the rate of photosynthesis and the light-harvesting capacity in the unicellular chlorophyte Dunaliella salina Teod., we varied the amount of inorganic carbon in the culture medium. Cells were grown under high irradiance either with a limiting supply of inorganic carbon, provided by an initial concentration of 25 mM NaHCO3, or with supplemental CO2 bubbled in the form of 3% CO2 in air. The NaHCO3-grown cells displayed slow rates of photosynthesis and had a small PSII light-harvesting Chl antenna size (60 Chl molecules). The half-time of PSII photodamage was 40 min. When switched to supplemental CO2 conditions, the rate of photodamage was retarded to a t1/2 = 70 min. Conversely, CO2-supplemented cells displayed faster rates of photosynthesis and a larger PSII light-harvesting Chl antenna size (500 Chl molecules). They also showed a rate of photodamage with t1/2 = 40 min. When depleted of CO2, the rate of photodamage was accelerated (t1/2  = 20 min). These results indicate that the in-vivo susceptibility to photodamage is modulated by the rate of forward electron transport through PSII. Moreover, a large Chl antenna size enhances the rate of light absorption and photodamage and, therefore, counters the mitigating effect of forward electron transport. We propose that under steady-state photosynthesis, the rate of light absorption (determined by incident light intensity and PS Chl antenna size) and the rate of forward electron transport (determined by CO2 availability) modulate the oxidation/reduction state of the primary PSII acceptor QA, which in turn defines the low/high probability for photodamage in the PSII reaction center. Received: 14 August 1997 / Accepted: 26 September 1997  相似文献   

2.
The triose phosphate utilization (TPU) rate has been identified as one of the processes that can limit terrestrial plant photosynthesis. However, we lack a robust quantitative assessment of TPU limitation of photosynthesis at the global scale. As a result, TPU, and its potential limitation of photosynthesis, is poorly represented in terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs). In this study, we utilized a global data set of photosynthetic CO2 response curves representing 141 species from tropical rainforests to Arctic tundra. We quantified TPU by fitting the standard biochemical model of C3 photosynthesis to measured photosynthetic CO2 response curves and characterized its instantaneous temperature response. Our results demonstrate that TPU does not limit leaf photosynthesis at the current ambient atmospheric CO2 concentration. Furthermore, our results showed that the light‐saturated photosynthetic rates of plants growing in cold environments are not more often limited by TPU than those of plants growing in warmer environments. In addition, our study showed that the instantaneous temperature response of TPU is distinct from temperature response of the maximum rate of Rubisco carboxylation. The new formulations of the temperature response of TPU derived in this study may prove useful in quantifying the biochemical limits to terrestrial plant photosynthesis and improve the representation of plant photosynthesis in TBMs.  相似文献   

3.
The relation between photosynthesis and water content was investigated using detached leaves of Populus euramericana (Dode) Guinier cv. Robusta. The time course of photosynthesis was measured at different light intensities, at different CO2 contents of the air and at constant temperature during the desiccation of the leaves. The time course of decreasing water content was obtained from continuous measurement of water transpired from the leaves. A large reduction of light saturated (400 W × m−2) photosynthetic rates was observed with decreasing water contents between 78 and 64% (water potential between −14 and −24 atm (bar)). This reduction was much greater in air with 0.3 % CO2 than in air with 5 % CO2, indicating a significant influence of CO2 diffusion resistance on rate of photosynthesis. The reduction of the rate of light and CO2 saturated photosynthesis (at 400 W × m–2 and 5% CO2 in the air) is a measure of the inactivation of the photosynthetic enzyme system by desiccation. A proportional reduction of the light saturated and light limited rate of photosynthesis (for different H2O contents) was found, when measured in air containing a saturating amount of CO2 (5 %). The reduction of the light limited rate of photosynthesis (at 20 W × m−2) was the same at both CO2 levels.  相似文献   

4.
A dynamic model of leaf photosynthesis for C3 plants has been developed for examination of the role of the dynamic properties of the photosynthetic apparatus in regulating CO2 assimilation in variable light regimes. The model is modified from the Farquhar-von Caemmerer-Berry model by explicitly including metabolite pools and the effects of light activation and deactivation of Calvin cycle enzymes. It is coupled to a dynamic stomatal conductance model, with the assimilation rate at any time being determined by the joint effects of the dynamic biochemical model and the stomatal conductance model on the intercellular CO2 pressure. When parametrized for each species, the model was shown to exhibit responses to step changes in photon flux density that agreed closely with the observed responses for both the understory plant Alocasia macrorrhiza and the crop plant Glycine max. Comparisons of measured and simulated photosynthesis under simulated light regimes having natural patterns of lightfleck frequencies and durations showed that the simulated total for Alocasia was within ±4% of the measured total assimilation, but that both were 12–50% less than the predictions from a steady–state solution of the model. Agreement was within ±10% for Glycine max, and only small differences were apparent between the dynamic and steady–state predictions. The model may therefore be parametrized for quite different species, and is shown to reflect more accurately the dynamics of photosynthesis than earlier dynamic models.  相似文献   

5.
Photosynthetic carbon gain in rapidly fluctuating light is controlled by stomatal conductance, activation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, a fast induction step in the regeneration of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate, and the build-up of pools of photosynthetic intermediates that allow post-illumination CO2 fixation. Experimental work over recent years has identified and characterised these factors. A physiologically-based dynamic model is described here that incorporates these factors and allows the simulation of carbon gain in response to any arbitrary sequence of light levels. The model output is found to conform well to previously reported plant responses of Alocasia macrorrhiza (L.) G. Don. observed under widely differing conditions. The model shows (i) responses of net assimilation rate and stomatal conductance to constant light levels and different CO2 concentrations that are consistent with experimental observations and predictions of a steady-state model; (ii) carbon gain to continue after the end of lightflecks, especially in uninduced leaves; (iii) carbon gain to be only marginally reduced during low-light periods of up to 2 s; (iv) a fast-inducing component in the regeneration of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate to be limiting for up to 60 s after an increase in light in uninduced leaves: the duration of this limitation lengthens with increasing CO2 concentration and is absent at low CO2 concentration; (v) oxygen evolution to exceed CO2 fixation during the first few seconds of a lightfleck, but CO2 fixation to continue after the end of the lightfleck whereas oxygen evolution decreases to low-light rates immediately. The model is thus able to reproduce published responses of leaves to a variety of perturbations. This provides good evidence that the present formulation of the model includes the essential rate-determining factors of photosynthesis under fluctuating light conditions. Received: 27 January 1997 / Accepted: 15 April 1997  相似文献   

6.
We present a combined three‐dimensional (3‐D) model of light propagation, CO2 diffusion and photosynthesis in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) leaves. The model incorporates a geometrical representation of the actual leaf microstructure that we obtained with synchrotron radiation X‐ray laminography, and was evaluated using measurements of gas exchange and leaf optical properties. The combination of the 3‐D microstructure of leaf tissue and chloroplast movement induced by changes in light intensity affects the simulated CO2 transport within the leaf. The model predicts extensive reassimilation of CO2 produced by respiration and photorespiration. Simulations also suggest that carbonic anhydrase could enhance photosynthesis at low CO2 levels but had little impact on photosynthesis at high CO2 levels. The model confirms that scaling of photosynthetic capacity with absorbed light would improve efficiency of CO2 fixation in the leaf, especially at low light intensity.  相似文献   

7.
Predicting the environmental responses of leaf photosynthesis is central to many models of changes in the future global carbon cycle and terrestrial biosphere. The steady-state biochemical model of C3 photosynthesis of Farquhar et al. (Planta 149, 78–90, 1980) provides a basis for these larger scale predictions; but a weakness in the application of the model as currently parameterized is the inability to accurately predict carbon assimilation at the range of temperatures over which significant photosynthesis occurs in the natural environment. The temperature functions used in this model have been based on in vitro measurements made over a limited temperature range and require several assumptions of in vivo conditions. Since photosynthetic rates are often Rubisco-limited (ribulose, 1-5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) under natural steady-state conditions, inaccuracies in the functions predicting Rubisco kinetic properties at different temperatures may cause significant error. In this study, transgenic tobacco containing only 10% normal levels of Rubisco were used to measure Rubisco-limited photosynthesis over a large range of CO2 concentrations. From the responses of the rate of CO2 assimilation at a wide range of temperatures, and CO2 and O2 concentrations, the temperature functions of Rubisco kinetic properties were estimated in vivo. These differed substantially from previously published functions. These new functions were then used to predict photosynthesis in lemon and found to faithfully mimic the observed pattern of temperature response. There was also a close correspondence with published C3 photosynthesis temperature responses. The results represent an improved ability to model leaf photosynthesis over a wide range of temperatures (10–40 °C) necessary for predicting carbon uptake by terrestrial C3 systems.  相似文献   

8.
Stem and leaf photosynthesis were measured in Glycine max var. essex (soybean) and Sparteum junceum (Spanish broom). The significance of stem photosynthesis to whole plant growth was evaluated by blocking stem photosynthesis with black straw sections. The growth of S. junceum was reduced by 18% when black straws were used in comparison to clear straws. The whole plant growth of G. max was not influenced by blocking the stem carbon contribution. Mean midday leaf photosynthesis was 12 μmol CO2 m–2 s–1 and 17 μmol CO2 m–2 s–1 for G. max and 5. junceum, respectively. Mean midday stem photosynthesis of S. junceum was 6.5 μmol CO2 m–2 s–1; however, positive net photosynthesis did not occur in G. max stems. Water stress caused a proportionally greater decrease in leaf photosynthesis compared to that of stems during diurnal cycles of photosynthesis in S. junceum. As a result the contribution to canopy carbon gain by stem photosynthesis increased from 38% to 48% of the total plant carbon gain under reduced water availability.  相似文献   

9.
In saturating irradiances of red light, photosynthesis of Laminaria saccharina (L.) Lamouroux was stimulated by low irradiances of continuous blue light only when the supply of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was limiting. The degree of this stimulation was inversely proportional to the logarithm of the concentration of free CO2, whether this was adjusted by varying the total DIC or the pH at a given DIC concentration. The final pH reached in a closed system was higher in blue light than in red light. Both acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide suppressed the responses to blue light almost completely, but reduced photosynthesis in red light by only 30%. Buffering the pH of the seawater also suppressed the stimulation of photosynthesis by blue light without affecting the photosynthetic rate in red light. The transient stimulation of O2 evolution by a blue light pulse was not accompanied by a corresponding increase in CO2 consumption. These observations could be explained if, in analogy to the mechanism proposed for Ectocarpus (Schmid, Mills & Dring 1996, Plant Cell and Environment 19,373–382, this issue, accompanying paper), photosynthesis was supported by a blue-light-activated release of CO2 from an internal store. We suggest that the store is located in the vacuoles of the cortical tissue of the blades. The main photosynthetic tissue, however, is in the overlying meristoderm, and blue-light-activated mobilization of the store could stimulate O2 evolution only if periplasmic carbonic anhydrase was available to facilitate CO2 uptake from the cortex.  相似文献   

10.
Agu Laisk  Gerald E. Edwards 《Planta》1998,205(4):632-645
The photosynthetic linear electron transport rate in excess of that used for CO2 reduction was evaluated in Sorghum bicolor Moench. [NADP-malic enzyme (ME)-type C4 plant], Amaranthus cruentus L. (NAD-ME-type C4 plant) and Helianthus annuus L. (C3 plant) leaves at different CO2 and O2 concentrations. The electron transport rate (J F) was calculated from fluorescence using the light partitioning factor (relative PSII cross-section) determined under conditions where excess electron transport was assumed to be negligible: low light intensities, 500 μmol CO2 · mol−1 and 2% O2. Under high light intensities there was a large excess of J F/4 at 10–100% O2 in the C3 plant due to photorespiration, but very little in sorghum and somewhat more in amaranth, showing that photorespiration is suppressed, more in the NADP-ME- and less in the NAD-ME-type species. It is concluded that when C4 photosynthesis is limited by supply of atmospheric CO2 to the C4 cycle, the C3 cycle becomes limited by regeneration of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) which in turn limits RuBP oxygenase activity and photorespiration. The rate of excess electron transport over that consumed for CO2 fixation in C4 plants was very sensitive to the presence of O2 in the gas phase, rapidly increasing between 0.01 and 0.1% O2, and at 2% O2 it was about two-thirds of that at 21% O2. This shows the importance of the Mehler O2 reduction as an electron sink, compared with photorespiration in C4 plants. However, the rate of the Mehler reaction is still too low to fully account for the extra ATP which is needed in C4 photosynthesis. Received: 8 November 1997 / Accepted: 26 December 1997  相似文献   

11.
Sorghum is one of the most important crops providing food and feed in many of the world's harsher environments. Sorghum utilizes the C4 pathway of photosynthesis in which a biochemical carbon-concentrating mechanism results in high CO2 assimilation rates. Overexpressing the Rieske FeS subunit of the Cytochrome b6f complex was previously shown to increase the rate of photosynthetic electron transport and stimulate CO2 assimilation in the model C4 plant Setaria viridis. To test whether productivity of C4 crops could be improved by Rieske overexpression, we created transgenic Sorghum bicolor Tx430 plants with increased Rieske content. The transgenic plants showed no marked changes in abundances of other photosynthetic proteins or chlorophyll content. The steady-state rates of electron transport and CO2 assimilation did not differ between the plants with increased Rieske abundance and control plants, suggesting that Cytochrome b6f is not the only factor limiting electron transport in sorghum at high light and high CO2. However, faster responses of non-photochemical quenching as well as an elevated quantum yield of Photosystem II and an increased CO2 assimilation rate were observed from the plants overexpressing Rieske during the photosynthetic induction, a process of activation of photosynthesis upon the dark–light transition. As a consequence, sorghum with increased Rieske content produced more biomass and grain when grown in glasshouse conditions. Our results indicate that increasing Rieske content has potential to boost productivity of sorghum and other C4 crops by improving the efficiency of light utilization and conversion to biomass through the faster induction of photosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Weger HG  Espie GS 《Planta》2000,210(5):775-781
Iron limitation led to a large increase in extracellular ferricyanide (Fe[III]) reductase activity in cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard. Mass-spectrometric measurement of gas exchange indicated that ferricyanide reduction in the dark resulted in a stimulation of respiratory CO2 production without affecting the rate of respiratory O2 consumption, consistent with the previously postulated activation of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in support of Fe(III) reduction by iron-limited Chlamydomonas cells (X. Xue et al., 1998, J. Phycol. 34: 939–944). At saturating irradiance, the rate of ferricyanide reduction was stimulated almost 3-fold, and this stimulation was inhibited by 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Ferricyanide reduction during photosynthesis resulted in approximately a 50% inhibition of photosynthetic CO2 fixation at saturating irradiance, and almost 100% inhibition of CO2 fixation at sub-saturating irradiance. Photosynthesis by iron-sufficient cells was not affected by ferricyanide addition. Addition of 250 μM ferricyanide to iron-limited cells in which photosynthesis was inhibited (either by the presence of glycolaldehyde, or by maintaining the cells at the CO2 compensation point) resulted in a stimulation in the rate of gross photosynthetic O2 evolution. Chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements indicated a large increase in non-photochemical quenching during ferricyanide reduction in the light; the increase in nonphotochemical quenching was abolished by the addition of nigericin. These results suggest that reduction of extracellular ferricyanide (mediated at the plasma membrane) interacts with both photosynthesis and respiration, and that both of these processes contribute NADPH in the light. Received: 15 September 1999 / Accepted: 14 October 1999  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.
The response curves of leaf photosynthesis to varying light, temperature and leaf-to-air vapour pressure deficit were measured in the C3 plants Flaveria pringlei and Oryza sativa in normal air with a computerized open infrared gas analysis (IRGA) system, and the photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, described as (1–F,/F′m) after Genty. Briantais & Baker (1989, Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 990, 87–92), was simultaneously measured with a modulated fluorometer. A model was written for rates of CO2 fixation as a function of the true rate of O2 evolution measured by fluorescene analysis (Jo2), mesophyll conductance and intercellular CO2 partial pressure. A second model was developed for rates of CO2 fixation as a function of Jo2, mesophyll conductance and stomatal conductance. In the latter case, leaf stomatal conductance was simulated using the stomatal model proposed by Leuning (1995, Plant, Cell and Environment 18 , 339–355). The rates of CO2 fixation predicted from the models were similar to rates measured by IRGA. The results indicate that there is potential to measure CO2 fixation in C3 plants by combining the non-invasive measurement of Jo2 by chlorophyll fluorescence analysis with the stomatal conductance model.  相似文献   

15.
Elevated CO2 enhances carbon uptake of a plant stand, but the magnitude of the increase varies among growth stages. We studied the relative contribution of structural and physiological factors to the CO2 effect on the carbon balance during stand development. Stands of an annual herb Chenopodium album were established in open-top chambers at ambient and elevated CO2 concentrations (370 and 700 μmol mol−1). Plant biomass growth, canopy structural traits (leaf area, leaf nitrogen distribution, and light gradient in the canopy), and physiological characteristics (leaf photosynthesis and respiration of organs) were studied through the growing season. CO2 exchange of the stand was estimated with a canopy photosynthesis model. Rates of light-saturated photosynthesis and dark respiration of leaves as related with nitrogen content per unit leaf area and time-dependent reduction in specific respiration rates of stems and roots were incorporated into the model. Daily canopy carbon balance, calculated as an integration of leaf photosynthesis minus stem and root respiration, well explained biomass growth determined by harvests (r 2 = 0.98). The increase of canopy photosynthesis with elevated CO2 was 80% at an early stage and decreased to 55% at flowering. Sensitivity analyses suggested that an alteration in leaf photosynthetic traits enhanced canopy photosynthesis by 40–60% throughout the experiment period, whereas altered canopy structure contributed to the increase at the early stage only. Thus, both physiological and structural factors are involved in the increase of carbon balance and growth rate of C. album stands at elevated CO2. However, their contributions were not constant, but changed with stand development.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration on growth of forest tree species are difficult to predict because practical limitations restrict experiments to much shorter than the average life-span of a tree. Long-term, process-based computer models must be used to extrapolate from shorter-term experiments. A key problem is to ensure a strong flow of information between experiments and models. In this study, meta-analysis techniques were used to summarize a suite of photosynthetic model parameters obtained from 15 field-based elevated [CO2] experiments on European forest tree species. The parameters studied are commonly used in modelling photosynthesis, and include observed light-saturated photosynthetic rates (Amax), the potential electron transport rate (Jmax), the maximum Rubisco activity (Vcmax) and leaf nitrogen concentration on mass (Nm) and area (Na) bases. Across all experiments, light-saturated photosynthesis was strongly stimulated by growth in elevated [CO2]. However, significant down-regulation of photosynthesis was also observed; when measured at the same CO2 concentration, photosynthesis was reduced by 10–20%. The underlying biochemistry of photosynthesis was affected, as shown by a down-regulation of the parameters Jmax and Vcmax of the order of 10%. This reduction in Jmax and Vcmax was linked to the effects of elevated [CO2] on leaf nitrogen concentration. It was concluded that the current model is adequate to model photosynthesis in elevated [CO2]. Tables of model parameter values for different European forest species are given.  相似文献   

17.
As previously described, the absolute rate of photosynthesis due to a limited concentration of dissolved inorganic carbon at alkaline pH, where the rate of CO2 formation is strictly limited, plotted as a function of chlorophyll (Chl) concentration, will take the form of a rectangular hyperbola combined with a linear rate directly proportional to [Chl], which are, respectively, due to the contribution of CO2 and HCO3 to photosynthesis. This model represents that the mathematical asymptote of absolute rate of photosynthesis versus cell density is described by the whole-cell rate constant for HCO3 uptake and the maximum rate of CO2 formation in the extracellular space. This means that any trace modification of the CO2 formation rate outside the cell will alter the photosynthetic rate and should be detectable experimentally. In air-grown Chlorella ellipsoidea and C. kessleri and in high CO2-grown C. saccharophila, the graph of the absolute rate of photosynthesis against [Chl] clearly followed the mathematical model described above and the actual CO2 formation rates outside the cells were not significantly different from the calculated rates. It also indicated that the whole-cell rate constants for CO2 and HCO3 uptake in air-grown C. ellipsoidea and C. saccharophila were similar at ≈ 300 and 2·0 mm3μg–1 Chl min–1, respectively, whereas those in air-grown C. kessleri were ≈ 550 and 15 mm3μg–1 Chl min–1. These results indicate that no acidification of the periplasmic space occurs, and there is no trace activity of external carbonic anhydrase in these microalgae.  相似文献   

18.
Leaf photosynthesis of crops acclimates to elevated CO2 and temperature, but studies quantifying responses of leaf photosynthetic parameters to combined CO2 and temperature increases under field conditions are scarce. We measured leaf photosynthesis of rice cultivars Changyou 5 and Nanjing 9108 grown in two free‐air CO2 enrichment (FACE) systems, respectively, installed in paddy fields. Each FACE system had four combinations of two levels of CO2 (ambient and enriched) and two levels of canopy temperature (no warming and warmed by 1.0–2.0°C). Parameters of the C3 photosynthesis model of Farquhar, von Caemmerer and Berry (the FvCB model), and of a stomatal conductance (gs) model were estimated for the four conditions. Most photosynthetic parameters acclimated to elevated CO2, elevated temperature, and their combination. The combination of elevated CO2 and temperature changed the functional relationships between biochemical parameters and leaf nitrogen content for Changyou 5. The gs model significantly underestimated gs under the combination of elevated CO2 and temperature by 19% for Changyou 5 and by 10% for Nanjing 9108 if no acclimation was assumed. However, our further analysis applying the coupled gs–FvCB model to an independent, previously published FACE experiment showed that including such an acclimation response of gs hardly improved prediction of leaf photosynthesis under the four combinations of CO2 and temperature. Therefore, the typical procedure that crop models using the FvCB and gs models are parameterized from plants grown under current ambient conditions may not result in critical errors in projecting productivity of paddy rice under future global change.  相似文献   

19.
The unabated rise in atmospheric [CO2] is associated with increased air temperature. Yet, few CO2‐enrichment studies have considered pre‐industrial [CO2] or warming. Consequently, we quantified the interactive effects of growth [CO2] and temperature on photosynthesis of faster‐growing Eucalyptus saligna and slower‐growing E. sideroxylon. Well‐watered and ‐fertilized tree seedlings were grown in a glasshouse at three atmospheric [CO2] (290, 400, and 650 µL L?1), and ambient (26/18 °C, day/night) and high (ambient + 4 °C) air temperature. Despite differences in growth rate, both eucalypts responded similarly to [CO2] and temperature treatments with few interactive effects. Light‐saturated photosynthesis (Asat) and light‐ and [CO2]‐saturated photosynthesis (Amax) increased by ~50% and ~10%, respectively, with each step‐increase in growth [CO2], underpinned by a corresponding 6–11% up‐regulation of maximal electron transport rate (Jmax). Maximal carboxylation rate (Vcmax) was not affected by growth [CO2]. Thermal photosynthetic acclimation occurred such that Asat and Amax were similar in ambient‐ and high‐temperature‐grown plants. At high temperature, the thermal optimum of Asat increased by 2–7 °C across [CO2] treatments. These results are the first to suggest that photosynthesis of well‐watered and ‐fertilized eucalypt seedlings will remain strongly responsive to increasing atmospheric [CO2] in a future, warmer climate.  相似文献   

20.
Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are an integral part of the soil system in arid regions worldwide, stabilizing soil surfaces, aiding vascular plant establishment, and are significant sources of ecosystem nitrogen and carbon. Hydration and temperature primarily control ecosystem CO2 flux in these systems. Using constructed mesocosms for incubations under controlled laboratory conditions, we examined the effect of temperature (5–35 °C) and water content (WC, 20–100%) on CO2 exchange in light (cyanobacterially dominated) and dark (cyanobacteria/lichen and moss dominated) biocrusts of the cool Colorado Plateau Desert in Utah and the hot Chihuahuan Desert in New Mexico. In light crusts from both Utah and New Mexico, net photosynthesis was highest at temperatures >30 °C. Net photosynthesis in light crusts from Utah was relatively insensitive to changes in soil moisture. In contrast, light crusts from New Mexico tended to exhibit higher rates of net photosynthesis at higher soil moisture. Dark crusts originating from both sites exhibited the greatest net photosynthesis at intermediate soil water content (40–60%). Declines in net photosynthesis were observed in dark crusts with crusts from Utah showing declines at temperatures >25 °C and those originating from New Mexico showing declines at temperatures >35 °C. Maximum net photosynthesis in all crust types from all locations were strongly influenced by offsets in the optimal temperature and water content for gross photosynthesis compared with dark respiration. Gross photosynthesis tended to be maximized at some intermediate value of temperature and water content and dark respiration tended to increase linearly. The results of this study suggest biocrusts are capable of CO2 exchange under a wide range of conditions. However, significant changes in the magnitude of this exchange should be expected for the temperature and precipitation changes suggested by current climate models.  相似文献   

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