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1.
Intensity, spectral characteristics and localization of the UV-laser (337 nm) induced blue-green and red fluorescence emission of green, etiolated and white primary leaves of wheat seedlings were studied in a combined fluorospectral and fluoromicroscopic investigation. The blue-green fluorescence of the green leaf was characterized by a maximum near 450 nm (blue region) and a shoulder near 530 nm (green region), whereas the red chlorophyll fluorescence exhibited maxima in the near-red (F690) and far-red (F735). The etiolated leaf with some carotenoids and traces of chlorophyll a, in turn, showed a higher intensity of the blue-green fluorescence with a shoulder in the green region and a strong red fluorescence peak near 684 to 690 nm, the far-red chlorophyll fluorescence maximum (F735) was, however, absent. The norfluorazone-treated white leaf, free of chlorophylls and carotenoids, only exhibited blue-green fluorescence of a very high intensity. In green and etiolated leaves the blue-green fluorescence primarily derived from the cell walls of the epidermis and the red fluorescence from the chlorophyll a of the mesophyll cells. In white leaves the blue-green fluorescence emanated from all cell walls of epidermis, mesophyll and leaf vein bundles. The shape and intensity of the blue-green and red fluorescence emission is determined by the reabsorption properties of chlorophylls and carotenoids in the mesophyll, thus giving rise to quite different values of the various fluorescence ratios F450/F690, F450/F530, F450/F735 and F690/F735 in green and etiolated leaves.  相似文献   

2.
Knaupp M  Mishra KB  Nedbal L  Heyer AG 《Planta》2011,234(3):477-486
A role of non-reducing sugars like sucrose and raffinose in the protection of plant cells against damage during freezing has been proposed for many species, but reports on physiological effects are conflicting. Non-aqueous fractionation of mesophyll cell compartments in Arabidopsis thaliana was used to show that sucrose and raffinose accumulate in plastids during low temperatures, pointing to a physiological role in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus. Comparing a previously described raffinose synthase (RS) mutant of A. thaliana with its corresponding wild type, accession Col-0, revealed that a lack of raffinose has no effect on electrolyte leakage from leaf cells after freeze–thaw cycles, supporting that raffinose is not essential for protecting the plasma membrane. However, in situ chlorophyll fluorescence showed that maximum quantum yield of PS II photochemistry (F v/F m) and other fluorescence parameters of cold acclimated leaves subjected to freeze–thaw cycles were significantly lower in the raffinose synthase mutant than in the corresponding wild type, indicating that raffinose is involved in stabilizing PS II of cold acclimated leaf cells against damage during freezing.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract Moderately frost-hardy leaves of the wintergreen broadleaf woody shrubs Pyracantha coccinea and Ligustrum ovalifolium and the winter annual herb Spinacia oleracea were subjected to extended freezing stress up to 15 d at temperatures 2–8°C above the mean lethal temperature (LT50). After thawing, the fast kinetics of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II (PSII) and the potential of linear photosynthetic electron transport of isolated thylakoid membranes was measured at room temperature. The lower the minimum freezing temperature and the longer the time of exposure, the greater was the suppression of the fluorescence signals of the leaves and decrease of the electron transport capacity of the thylakoid membranes. The pattern of inactivation of PSII -mediated electron flow, i.e. inhibition of photoreaction to photochemistry and/or electron donation to the photochemical reaction, during long-term freezing at temperatures somewhat above the LT50 of the leaves was similar to that observed earlier after relatively brief exposure of leaves and isolated thylakoid membranes to more severe freezing stress. As injury occurred during freezing in complete darkness, it is likely that prolonged winter stress under natural environmental conditions causes changes in the photosynthetic apparatus of moderately hardy leaves which are not due to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

4.
光合作用的冰冻伤害研究大多利用离体叶片、原生质体,甚至叶绿体类囊体进行人工冰冻预处理,关于室外自然温度下出现的植物光合作用冰冻伤害,特别是冰冻影响光合量子效率的研究报告还很少。虽然光合碳同化受抑是最早可以测到的冰冻伤害征状,但其机理迄今不清楚(Krause等1982,Krause和Klosson1983)。  相似文献   

5.
Plants can avoid freezing damage by preventing extracellular ice formation below the equilibrium freezing temperature (supercooling). We used Olea europaea cultivars to assess which traits contribute to avoid ice nucleation at sub‐zero temperatures. Seasonal leaf water relations, non‐structural carbohydrates, nitrogen and tissue damage and ice nucleation temperatures in different plant parts were determined in five cultivars growing in the Patagonian cold desert. Ice seeding in roots occurred at higher temperatures than in stems and leaves. Leaves of cold acclimated cultivars supercooled down to ?13 °C, substantially lower than the minimum air temperatures observed in the study site. During winter, leaf ice nucleation and leaf freezing damage (LT50) occurred at similar temperatures, typical of plant tissues that supercool. Higher leaf density and cell wall rigidity were observed during winter, consistent with a substantial acclimation to sub‐zero temperatures. Larger supercooling capacity and lower LT50 were observed in cold‐acclimated cultivars with higher osmotically active solute content, higher tissue elastic adjustments and lower apoplastic water. Irreversible leaf damage was only observed in laboratory experiments at very low temperatures, but not in the field. A comparative analysis of closely related plants avoids phylogenetic independence bias in a comparative study of adaptations to survive low temperatures.  相似文献   

6.
We compared photosynthetic and UV-B-absorbing pigment concentrations, gas-exchange rates and photosystem II (PSII) electron transport rates in leaves of pea (Pisum sativum mutant Argenteum) grown without UV-B or under an enhanced UV-B treatment (18 kJ m?2 biologically effective daily dose) in a greenhouse. We also compared the distribution of chlorophyll by depth within leaves of each treatment by using image analysis of chlorophyll autofluorescence. Ultraviolet-B treatment elicited putative protective responses such as an 80% increase in UV-B-absorbing compound concentrations (leaf-area basis), and a slight increase in mesophyll thickness (178 in controls compared to 191 μm in UV-B-treated leaves). However, photosynthetic rates of UV-B-treated leaves were only 80% of those of controls. This was paralleled by reductions in leaf conductance to water vapor (50% of controls) and intercellular CO2 concentrations, suggesting that stomatal limitations were at least partly responsible for lower photosynthetic rates under the UV-B treatment. Total chlorophyll concentrations (leaf-area basis) in UV-B-treated leaves were only 70% of controls, and there was a shift in the relative distribution of chlorophyll with depth in UV-B-treated leaves. In control leaves chlorophyll concentrations were highest near the adaxial surface of the upper palisade, dropped with depth and then increased slightly in the bottom of the spongy mesophyll nearest the abaxial surface. In contrast, in UV-B-treated leaves chlorophyll concentrations were lowest at the adaxial surface of the upper palisade and increased with depth through the leaf. The most notable treatment difference in chlorophyll concentrations was in the upper palisade near the adaxial surface of leaves, where we estimate that chlorophyll concentrations in each 1-μm-thick paradermal layer were about 50% lower in UV-B-treated leaves than in controls. We found reduced electron transport capacity in UV-B-treated leaves, based on lower maximum fluorescence (Fm), variable to maximum fluorescence ratios (F,/Fm) and quantum yield of PSII electron transport (Y). However, the above were assessed from fluorometer measurements on the adaxial leaf surface and may reflect the markedly lower chlorophyll concentrations in the upper palisade of UV-B-treated leaves.  相似文献   

7.
Laser-induced fluorescence images of the leaf of an aurea mutant of Nicotiana tabacum were recorded for the blue and green fluorescence at 440 and 520 nm and the red chlorophyll fluorescence at 690 and 735 nm. The results obtained were compared with direct measurements of the fluorescence emission spectra of leaves using a conventional spectrofluorometer. The highest emission of blue (F440) and green fluorescence (F520) within the leaf was found in the leaf veins, particularly the main leaf vein. In contrast, the intercostal fields of leaves, which exhibited the highest chlorophyll content, showed only a very low blue and green fluorescence emission, which was much lower than the red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence emission bands (F690 and F735). Correspondingly, the ratio of blue to red leaf fluorescence F440/F690 of upper and lower leaf side was much higher in the leaf veins (values 1.2 to 1.5) than in intercostal fields (values of 0.6 to 0.7). The results also demonstrated that in the intercostal fields the major part of the blue-green fluorescence was reabsorbed by chlorophylls and carotenoids. A partial reabsorption of the red fluorescence band near 690 nm by leaf chlorophyll took place, but did not affect the far-red fluorescence band near F735. As a consequence the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690/F735 exhibited significantly higher values in the chlorophyll-poor leaf vein regions (1.7 to 1.8) than in the chlorophyll-rich intercostal fields (0.8 to 1.3). Imaging spectroscopy of leaves was shown to be much more precise than the screening of fluorescence signatures by conventional fluorometers. It clearly demonstrated that the blue-green fluorescence and the red chlorophyll fluorescence of leaves exhibit an inverse contrast to each other. The advantage of the fluorescence imaging spectroscopy, which allows the simultaneous screening of the whole leaf surface and distinct parts of it, and its possible application in the detection of stress effects or local damage by insects and pathogens, is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
F. Cho  Govind Jee 《BBA》1970,205(3):371-378
A relation of fluorescence spectra of Chlorella (in the 295–77°K range) to the changes in the phase of the ice is suggested in this paper.

When Chlorella cells are first cooled to 77°K and then warmed slowly, the change of the fluorescence intensity as a function of temperature is different for different bands as earlier reported in spinach chloroplasts. In the 80–150°K range, the F698 decreases rapidly, F687 remains almost unchanged, and f680 increases; above 150°K (the temperature at which ice changes from vitreous to cubic phase), F687 decreases more rapidly than any other band. The F725, that decreases smoothly in the 77–295°K range, is composed of several bands (F717 and F725).

If Chlorella cells are first cooled to 77°K, and then warmed to 260°K, and recooled to 77°K before melting, f685, f698 and f730 — but not f717 — are lowered; this fluorescence decrease is not due to changes in the reabsorption of fluorescence or to major changes in the cellular structure due to freezing.

The F698 band is greatly influenced by the aqueous environment; the phase of the ice and the addition of polar solvents (10% dimethylsulfoxide) greatly influence it. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that F698 is from an energy trap (at low temperatures) of System II.  相似文献   


9.
Sea ice seasonality during the Holocene, Adélie Land, East Antarctica   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Thin sections of laminated cores from different Antarctic coastal areas have demonstrated the potential of diatom species to document climate change at the seasonal scale. Here we present the relative abundances of four diatom species and species groups (Fragilariopsis curta group as a proxy for yearly sea ice cover, F. kerguelensis as a proxy for summer sea-surface temperature, Chaetoceros Hyalochaete resting spores as a proxy for spring sea ice melting and the Thalassiosira antarctica group as a proxy for autumn sea ice formation) in core MD03-2601 retrieved off Adélie Land on the Antarctic continental shelf. These abundances were compared to surface temperatures and sea ice cover modelled over the last 9000 years. Both the marine records and the simulated climate demonstrated a cooler Early Holocene (9000–7700 years BP), a warmer Mid-Holocene (7700–4000 years BP) and a colder Late Holocene (4000–1000 years BP). Yearly sea ice cover followed an inverse pattern to temperatures with less sea ice during the Mid-Holocene Hypsithermal than during the Late Holocene Neoglacial. However, diatom census counts and model output indicate that sea ice spring melting happened earlier in the season, as expected, but that autumn sea ice formation also occurred earlier in the season during the Hypsithermal than during the colder Neoglacial, thereby following seasonal changes in local insolation.  相似文献   

10.
A newly developed laboratory fluorescence imaging system was used to obtain fluorescence images (FImage) of freshly excised cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) leaves in spectral bands centered in the blue (F450), green (F550), red (F680), and far-red (F730) spectral regions that resulted from a broad-band (300-400 nm) excitation source centered at 360 nm. Means of relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) from these spectral fluorescence images were compared with spectral fluorescence emission data obtained from excitation wavelengths at 280 nm (280EX, 300-550 nm) and 380 nm (380EX, 400-800 nm) of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) extracts from these leaves. All three fluorescence data types (FImage, 280EX, 380EX) were used to assess ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280-320 nm) induced physiological changes and the possible use of N-[2-(2-oxo-1-imidazolidinyl) ethyl]-N′-phenylurea (EDU or ethylenediurea) as a chemical protectant against UV-B damage. Plants exhibited well known foliar growth and pigment responses to UV-B exposure (e.g., increased UV-B absorbing compounds and decreased leaf area, chlorophyll a content; and and lower chlorophyll a/b and chlorophyll/carotenoid pigment ratios). Since EDU alone had no effect on foliar variables, there was no evidence that EDU afforded protection against UV-B. Instead, EDU augmented some UV-B effects when provided in conjunction with UV-B irradiation (e.g., reductions in the chlorophyll/carotenoid ratio, total photosynthetic pigments, and chlorophyll b content).Relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) in the longer visible wavelengths (green, red, and far-red) were uncorrelated for comparisons between the FImage and 380EX data sets. However, blue and green RFI were significantly correlated (0.8r0.6; P ≤0.002) for comparisons between FImage and 280EX data sets. UV-B treatment caused an increase in blue RFI (e.g., F450) in both images and 280EX measurements. One explanation is that the UV-B excitation of both 280EX and FImage stimulates processes that produce excess blue fluorescence. The molecules that produce the excess blue fluorescence in both the 280EX and the Fimage data are different electron transfer agents that operate in parallel. For FImage, the UV excitation penetrates leaf surface layers to stimulate fluorescence from compounds in mesophyll and epidermal tissues (as occurs for the extracts of leaf discs), whereas emissions captured at longer, less energetic wavelengths, were primarily from the epidermal layer. UV-B irradiated leaves showed much greater heteorgeneity of RFI in both the green (F550FImag) and the red (F680FImag) bands than unirradiated leaves; this was true irrespective of EDU treatment.Although qualitative responses in individual bands differed between FImage and 380EX data, similar results were obtained in the detection of UV-B induced effects when the red/green and blue/far-red fluorescence ratios of these data were compared. The red/green ratio (either F680/F550FImage or F675/F525380EX) was lower for UV-B exposed plants in both images and 380EX data. UV-B exposure also significantly enhanced the blue/far-red ratio of images (F450/F740FImage) and the comparable 380EX ratio (F450/F730380EX) for the combined UV-B/EDU group. The far-red/red ratios were not useful in separating treatment effects in images or 380EX. Although comparable ratios were not available in 280EX data, the UV/blue ratio (F315/F420280EX) was substantially reduced by UV-B exposure and was inversely related to total photosynthetic pigment content. These findings suggest that the red/green ratio (FImage, 380EX) and the UV/blue ratio (280EX) may be as useful as the blue/far-red ratio (380EX) reported previously in detection of UV-B stress. Furthermore, the results support the validity of the imaging technique as a non-destructive diagnostic tool for assessing UV-B stress damage in plants.  相似文献   

11.
The deposition of surface (farinose) flavonoids on aerial parts of some Primula species is a well-documented but poorly understood phenomenon. Here, we show that flavonoid deposition on the leaves and winter buds may contribute strongly to preventing freezing damage in these plants. The ice nucleation temperature of fairy primrose (Primula malacoides) leaves covered with natural flavone was approximately 6~C lower compared to those that had their flavone artificially removed. Additionally, farinose flavonoids on the leaves reduced subse- quent electrolyte leakage (EL) from the cells exposed to freezing temperatures. Interestingly, exogenous application of flavone at 4 mg/g fresh weight to P. malacoides leaves, which had the original flavone mechanically removed, restored freezing tolerance, and diminished EL from the cells to pretreatment values. Our results suggest that farinose flavonoids may function as mediators of freezing tolerance in P. malacoides, and exogenous application of flavone could be used to reduce freezing damage during sudden but predictable frost events in other plant species.  相似文献   

12.
During cold acclimation, winter rye ( Secale cereale L.) plants develop the ability to tolerate freezing temperatures by forming ice in intercellular spaces and xylem vessels. In this study, proteins were extracted from the apoplast of rye leaves to determine their role in controlling extracellular ice formation. Several polypeptides in the 15 to 32 kDa range accumulated in the leaf apoplast during cold acclimation at 5°C and decreased during deacclimation at 20°C. A second group of polypeptides (63, 65 and 68 kDa) appeared only when the leaves were maximally frost tolerant. Ice nucleation activity, as well as the previously reported antifreeze activity, was higher in apoplastic extracts from cold-acclimated than from nonacclimated rye leaves. These results indicate that apoplastic proteins exert a direct influence on the growth of ice. In addition, freezing injury was greater in extracted cold-acclimated leaves than in unextracted cold-acclimated leaves, which suggests that the proteins present in the apoplast are an important component of the mechanism by which winter rye leaves tolerate ice formation  相似文献   

13.
A passive light microscope system has been developed, capable of reconstructing an extended-focus 3-D cell-level image of chlorophyll fluorescence and Phi(PSII) of intact attached leaves using a limited number of focal plane images of chlorophyll fluorescence. Using this system, the relationships between the depth of the mesophyll cells in spongy tissue and the intensity of the chlorophyll fluorescence and the Phi(PSII) were investigated in sunflower leaves exposed to 300 ppb ozone for 12 h at a PPFD of 300 micromol m(-2) s(-1) actinic light. After ozone exposure, fluorescence intensity (F) largely decreased in the cells just under the epidermal cells (within approximately 20 microm of the epidermal cells), but the sites where fluorescence intensity decreased had no relationship to the position of the stomata. By contrast, the distribution of Phi(PSII) showed no change after the ozone exposure. These findings suggest that ozone-induced inhibition occurs in the cells just under the epidermal cells by reducing the light absorption of the chloroplasts, while the operating quantum efficiency of PSII photochemistry is maintained.  相似文献   

14.
Infrared video thermography was used to observe ice nucleation temperatures, patterns of ice formation, and freezing rates in nonacclimated and cold acclimated leaves of a spring (cv Quest) and a winter (cv Express) canola (Brassica napus). Distinctly different freezing patterns were observed, and the effect of water content, sugars, and soluble proteins on the freezing process was characterized. When freezing was initiated at a warm subzero temperature, ice growth rapidly spread throughout nonacclimated leaves. In contrast, acclimated leaves initiated freezing in a horseshoe pattern beginning at the uppermost edge followed by a slow progression of ice formation across the leaf. However, when acclimated leaves, either previously killed by a slow freeze (2 degrees C h(-1)) or by direct submersion in liquid nitrogen, were refrozen their freezing pattern was similar to nonacclimated leaves. A novel technique was developed using filter paper strips to determine the effects of both sugars and proteins on the rate of freezing of cell extracts. Cell sap from nonacclimated leaves froze 3-fold faster than extracts from acclimated leaves. The rate of freezing in leaves was strongly dependent upon the osmotic potential of the leaves. Simple sugars had a much greater effect on freezing rate than proteins. Nonacclimated leaves containing high water content did not supercool as much as acclimated leaves. Additionally, wetted leaves did not supercool as much as nonwetted leaves. As expected, cell solutes depressed the nucleation temperature of leaves. The use of infrared thermography has revealed that the freezing process in plants is a complex process, reminding us that many aspects of freezing tolerance occur at a whole plant level involving aspects of plant structure and metabolites rather than just the expression of specific genes alone.  相似文献   

15.
The frost survival mechanism of vegetative buds of angiosperms was suggested to be extracellular freezing causing dehydration, elevated osmotic potential to prevent freezing. However, extreme dehydration would be needed to avoid freezing at the temperatures down to ?45°C encountered by many trees. Buds of Alnus alnobetula, in common with other frost hardy angiosperms, excrete a lipophilic substance, whose functional role remains unclear. Freezing of buds was studied by infrared thermography, psychrometry, and cryomicroscopy. Buds of Aalnobetula did not survive by extracellular ice tolerance but by deep supercooling, down to ?45°C. An internal ice barrier prevented ice penetration from the frozen stem into the bud. Cryomicroscopy revealed a new freezing mechanism. Until now, supercooled buds lost water towards ice masses that form in the subtending stem and/or bud scales. In Aalnobetula, ice forms harmlessly inside the bud between the supercooled leaves. This would immediately trigger intracellular freezing and kill the supercooled bud in other species. In Aalnobetula, lipophilic substances (triterpenoids and flavonoid aglycones) impregnate the surface of bud leaves. These prevent extrinsic ice nucleation so allowing supercooling. This suggests a means to protect forestry and agricultural crops from extrinsic ice nucleation allowing transient supercooling during night frosts.  相似文献   

16.
A method of imaging and analysis of fluorescence kinetic parameters distributed over leaf area is described in details. Video data recorded by the CCD-camera were processed using free programs VirtualDub and ImageJ. The method allows not only to image the distribution of fluorescence decrease ratio (Rfd), but also to obtain fluorescence induction curves, which are corresponded to any region of interest selected within the leaf image. A considerable mosaicism of shade leaves of Ficus benjamina L. was shown on the basis of Rfd values, whose functional significance is discussed from the point of view of adaptation to different light intensities. A pronounced non-uniformity of F. benjamina leaves was revealed in relation to the retention time of the secondary fluorescence maximum (peak M). A method of differential imaging was proposed to allow visualization of this non-uniformity and to demonstrate the existence of the previously unknown phenomenon of secondary chlorophyll fluorescence “wave” in leaves. It was also shown the absence of M peak in the chlorophyll-deficient, lacking the mesophyll leaf sectors, where the residual chlorophyll is originated from guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

17.
Differential thermal analysis (DTA) was used to determine the exothermic responses in dormant stems and excised lengths of stem of Salix dasyclados Wimmer subjected to artificial freezing treatments.
The presence of ice on the surfaces of intact stems restricted the mechanism of freezing avoidance to temperatures above –4°C. In contrast, excised lengths of stem started to freeze as soon as the ambient temperature fell below –2°C, demonstrating that extracellular ice formation takes place earlier if cut surfaces are present. Exposure of dormant excised lengths of stem to subfreezing temperatures for more than 8 weeks did not alter their nucleation temperature not their exothermic differential responses. Early extracellular crystallisation of freezable cellular water provides conditions that allow dormant Salix dasyclados stems or excised lengths of stem to survive extreme freezing stress.
Crystallisation of extracellular and cellular water took place in the cortex, and did not result in visual damage or reduced survival. This nucleation of extracellular water took place over the same temperature range whether the excised dormant lengths of stem were partly (bark only) or completely thawed. Exposure of dormant tissue to 20°C for up to 24 h did not alter the level of freezing tolerance, nor did it increase the susceptibility of excised lengths of stem to damage by extreme temperature fluctuations.  相似文献   

18.
The blue, green and red fluorescence emission of green wheat ( Triticum aestivum L. var. Rector) and soybean leaves ( Glycine max L. var. Maple Arrow) as induced by UV light (nitrogen laser: 337 nm) was determined in a phytochamber and in plants grown in the field. The fluorescence emission spectra show a blue maximum near 450 nm, a green shoulder near 530 nm and the two red chlorophyll fluorescence maxima near 690 and 735 nm. The ratio of blue to red fluorescence, F450/F690, exhibited a clear correlation to the irradiance applied during the growth of the plants. In contrast, the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio, F690/F735, and the ratio of blue to green fluorescence, F450/F530, seem not to be or are only slightly influenced by the irradiance applied during plant growth. The blue fluorescence F450 only slightly decreased, whereas the red chlorophyll fluorescence decreased with increasing irradiance applied during growth of the plants. This, in turn, resulted in greatly increased values of the ratio, F450/F690, from 0.5 – 1.5 to 6.4 – 8.0. The decrease in the chlorophyll fluorescence with increasing irradiance seems to be caused by the accumulation of UV light absorbing substances in the epidermal layer which considerably reduces the UV laser light which passes through the epidermis and excites the chlorophyll fluorescence of the chloroplasts in the subepidermal mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

19.
The UV light (337 nm) induced blue-green fluorescence emission of green leaves is characterized at room temperature (298 K) by a maximum near 450 nm (blue region) and a shoulder near 525 nm (green region) and was here also studied at 77 K. At liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K) the blue (F450) and green fluorescence (F525) are much enhanced as is the red chlorophyll fluorescence near 735 nm. During development of green tobacco leaves the blue fluorescence F450 (77 K) is shifted towards longer wavelengths from about 410 nm to 450 nm. The isolated leaf epidermis of tobacco showed only slight fluorescence emission with a maximum near 410 nm. The green fluorescence F525 was found to mainly originate from the mesophyll of the leaf, its intensity increased when the epidermis was removed. The red chlorophyll fluorescence emission was also enhanced when the epidermis was stripped off; this considerably changed the blue/red fluorescence ratios F450/F690 and F450/F735. The epidermis, with its cell wall and UV-light-absorbing substances in its vacuole, plays the role of a barrier for the exciting UV-light. In contrast to intact and homogenized leaves, isolated intact chloroplasts and thylakoid membranes did not exhibit a blue-green fluorescence emission.  相似文献   

20.
Neotropical ecosystems between treeline and snowline, called páramos, stretch along Andean ranges from Costa Rica to northern Peru. The páramo climate is characterized by regular night frosts occurring throughout the year. Páramo plants use two strategies to deal with freezing temperatures. They either avoid ice formation in the tissues or tolerate extracellular ice formation. We tested the microclimate hypothesis, which suggests that the freezing resistance of the páramo plants is determined by plant height, that is, that taller plants experience a milder microclimate and avoid freezing, whereas smaller plants are exposed to the more extreme thermal conditions near the ground and tolerate them. We measured the temperature at which ice formed inside the plants (the ‘exotherm’), and compared it with the temperature at which 50% damage to the tissue occurred (Lt50); a significant difference between the exotherm and Lt50 would indicate freezing tolerance whereas the absence of a difference would indicate avoidance by supercooling. We analysed the freezing resistance of 38 common Ecuadorian páramo species. We found no correlation between plant height and freezing resistance mechanism or injury temperature and reject the microclimate hypothesis. Tolerant plants reach higher altitudes than avoidant plants, but their altitudinal ranges largely overlap and the Lt50 does not differ between them. These results suggest that there is no qualitative difference between the two strategies to survive the páramo frosts. Shrub leaves were injured at significantly lower temperatures than other life forms, such as herbs, which may reflect leaf anatomical differences among the plants.  相似文献   

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