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1.
Hylocereus undatus (Haworth) Britton and Rose growing in controlled environment chambers at 370 and 740 μmol CO2 mol?1 air showed a Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) pattern of CO2 uptake, with 34% more total daily CO2 uptake under the doubled CO2 concentration and most of the increase occurring in the late afternoon. For both CO2 concentrations, 90% of the maximal daily CO2 uptake occurred at a total daily photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of only 10 mol m?2 day?1 and the best day/night air temperatures were 25/15°C. Enhancement of the daily net CO2 uptake by doubling the CO2 concentration was greater under the highest PPFD (30 mol m?2 day?1) and extreme day/night air temperatures (15/5 and 45/35°C). After 24 days of drought, daily CO2 uptake under 370 μmol CO2 mol?1 was 25% of that under 740 μmol CO2 mol?1. The ratio of variable to maximal chlorophyll fluorescence (Fy/Fm) decreased as the PPFD was raised above 5 mol m?2 day?1, at extreme day/night temperatures and during drought, suggesting that stress occurred under these conditions. Fv/Fm was higher under the doubled CO2 concentration, indicating that the current CO2 concentration was apparently limiting for photosynthesis. Thus net CO2 uptake by the shade-tolerant H. undatus, the photosynthetic efficiency of which was greatest at low PPFDs. showed a positive response to doubling the CO2 concentration, especially under stressful environmental conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Morphological and anatomical changes for first-order daughter cladodes (flattened stem segments) of a prickly pear cactus, Opuntia ficus-indica, were monitored to determine the effects of a doubled atmospheric CO2 concentration on their development and mature form. For daughter cladodes developing in controlled environment chambers for 60 d, maximal elongation rates were similar under a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of 6 mol m−2 d−1 and a CO2 concentration of 370 μl liter−1, an increased PPFD (10 mol m−2 d−1), and an increased PPFD and a doubled CO2 concentration. These maximal rates, however, occurred at 20, 15, and 12 d, respectively. The maximal relative growth rate under the doubled CO2 concentration was about twice that under the other conditions. For cladodes at 60 d as well as after 4 and 16 mo in open-top chambers, doubling the CO2 concentration had no effect on final length or width. At 4 mo, cladodes under doubled C02 were 27% thicker, perhaps allowing the earlier production of second-order daughter cladodes. The chlorenchyma was then 31% thicker and composed of longer cells. At 16 mo, the difference in cladode thickness diminished, but the chlorenchyma remained thicker under doubled CO2, which may contribute to greater net CO2 uptake for O. ficus-indica under elevated CO2 concentrations. Two other persistent differences were a 20% lower stomatal frequency and a 30% thicker cuticle with more epicuticular wax for cladodes under doubled CO2, both of which may help reduce transpirational water loss.  相似文献   

3.
Branches of 22-year-old loblolly pine (Pinus taeda, L.) trees growing in a plantation were exposed to ambient CO2, ambient + 165 μmol mol?1 CO2 or ambient + 330 μmol mol?1 CO2 concentrations in combination with ambient or ambient + 2°C air temperatures for 3 years. Field measurements in the third year indicated that net carbon assimilation was enhanced in the elevated CO2 treatments in all seasons. On the basis of A/Ci, curves, there was no indication of photosynthetic down-regulation. Branch growth and leaf area also increased significantly in the elevated CO2 treatments. The imposed 2°C increase in air temperature only had slight effects on net assimilation and growth. Compared with the ambient CO2 treatment, rates of net assimilation were ~1·6 times greater in the ambient + 165 μmol mol?1 CO2 treatment and 2·2 times greater in the ambient + 330 μmol mol?1 CO2 treatment. These ratios did not change appreciably in measurements made in all four seasons even though mean ambient air temperatures during the measurement periods ranged from 12·6 to 28·2°C. This indicated that the effect of elevated CO2 concentrations on net assimilation under field conditions was primarily additive. The results also indicated that the effect of elevated CO2 (+ 165 or + 330 μmol mol?1) was much greater than the effect of a 2°C increase in air temperature on net assimilation and growth in this species.  相似文献   

4.
The response of Eucalyptus grandis seedlings to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations was examined by growing seedlings at either 340 or 660 n mol CO2 mol-1 for 6 weeks. Graded increments of phosphorus and nitrogen fertilizers were added to a soil deficient in these nutrients to establish if the growth response to increasing nutrient availability was affected by CO2 concentration. At 660 μmol CO2 mol-1, seedling dry weight was up to five times greater than at 340 μmol CO2 mol-1. The absolute response was largest when both nitrogen and phosphorus availability was high but the relative increase in dry weight was greatest at low phosphorus availability. At 340 μmol CO2 mol-1 and high nitrogen availability, growth was stimulated by addition of phosphorus up to 76 mg kg 1 soil. Further additions of phosphorus had little effect. However, at 660 μmol CO2 mol-1, growth only began to plateau at a phosphorus addition rate of 920mg kg-1 soil. At 340 μmol CO2 mol-1 and high phosphorus availability, increasing nitrogen from 40 to 160mg kg-1 soil had little effect on plant growth. At high CO2, growth reached a maximum at between 80 and 160mg nitrogen kg-1 soil. Total uptake of phosphorus was greater at high CO2 concentration at all fertilizer addition rates, but nitrogen uptake was either lower or unchanged at high CO2 concentration except at the highest nitrogen fertilizer rate. The shoot to root ratio was increased by CO2 enrichment, primarily because the specific leaf weight was greater. The nitrogen and phosphorus concentration in the foliage was lower at elevated CO2 concentration partly because of the higher specific leaf weight. These results indicate that critical foliar concentrations currently used to define nutritional status and fertilizer management may need to be reassessed as the atmospheric CO2 concentration rises.  相似文献   

5.
The whole-plant CO2 compensation point (Γplant) is the minimum atmospheric CO2 level required for sustained growth. The minimum CO2 requirement for growth is critical to understanding biosphere feedbacks on the carbon cycle during low CO2 episodes; however, actual values of Γplant remain difficult to calculate. Here, we have estimated Γplant in tobacco by measuring the relative leaf expansion rate at several low levels of atmospheric CO2, and then extrapolating the leaf growth vs. CO2 response to estimate CO2 levels where no growth occurs. Plants were grown under three temperature treatments, 19/15, 25/20 and 30/25°C day/night, and at CO2 levels of 100, 150, 190 and 270 μmol CO2 mol−1 air. Biomass declined with growth CO2 such that Γplant was estimated to be approximately 65 μmol mol−1 for plants grown at 19/15 and 30/25°C. In the first 19 days after germination, plants grown at 100 μmol mol−1 had low growth rates, such that most remained as tiny seedlings (canopy size <1 cm2). Most seedlings grown at 150 μmol mol−1 and 30/25°C also failed to grow beyond the small seedling size by day 19. Plants in all other treatments grew beyond the small seedling size within 3 weeks of planting. Given sufficient time (16 weeks after planting) plants at 100 μmol mol−1 eventually reached a robust size and produced an abundance of viable seed. Photosynthetic acclimation did not increase Rubisco content at low CO2. Instead, Rubisco levels were unchanged except at the 100 and 150 μmol mol−1 where they declined. Chlorophyll content and leaf weight per area declined in the same proportion as Rubisco, indicating that leaves became less expensive to produce. From these results, we conclude that the effects of very low CO2 are most severe during seedling establishment, in large part because CO2 deficiency slows the emergence and expansion of new leaves. Once sufficient leaf area is produced, plants enter the exponential growth phase and acquire sufficient carbon to complete their life cycle, even under warm conditions (30/25°C) and CO2 levels as low as 100 μmol mol−1.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment and root restriction on photosynthetic characteristics and growth of banana (Musa sp. AAA cv. Gros Michel) plants were investigated. Plants were grown aeroponically in root chambers in controlled environment glasshouse rooms at CO2 concentrations of 350 or 1 000 μmol CO2 mol-1. At each CO2 concentration, plants were grown in large (2001) root chambers that did not restrict root growth or in small (20 1) root chambers that restricted root growth. Plants grown at 350 μmol CO2 mol-1 generally had a higher carboxylation efficiency than plants grown at 1 000 μmol CO2 mol-1 although actual net CO2 assimilation (A) was higher at the higher ambient CO2 concentration due to increased intercellular CO2 concentrations (Ci resulting from CO2 enrichment. Thus, plants grown at 1 000 μmol CO2 mol-1 accumulated more leaf area and dry weight than plants grown at 350 μmol CO2 mol-1. Plants grown in the large root chambers were more photosynthetically efficient than plants grown in the small root chambers. At 350 μmol CO2 mol-1, leaf area and dry weights of plant organs were generally greater for plants in the large root chambers compared to those in the small root chambers. Atmospheric CO2 enrichment may have compensated for the effects of root restriction on plant growth since at 1 000 μmol CO2 mol-1 there was generally no effect of root chamber size on plant dry weight.  相似文献   

7.
We grew 2.4 m2 wheat canopies in a large growth chamber under high photosynthetic photon flux (1000 μmol m−2 s−1) and using two CO2 concentrations, 360 and 1200 μmol mol−1. Photosynthetically active radiation (400–700 nm) was attenuated slightly faster through canopies grown in 360μmol mol−1 than through canopies grown in 1200μmol mol−1, even though high-CO2 canopies attained larger leaf area indices. Tissue fractions were sampled from each 5-cm layer of the canopies. Leaf tissue sampled from the tops of canopies grown in 1200μmol mol−1 accumulated significantly more total non-structural carbohydrate, starch, fructan, sucrose, and glucose (p≤ 0.05) than for canopies grown in 360μmol mol−1. Non-structural carbohydrate did not significantly increase in the lower canopy layers of the elevated CO2 treatment. Elevated CO2 induced fructan synthesis in all leaf tissue fractions, but fructan formation was greatest in the uppermost leaf area. A moderate temperature reduction of 10 °C over 5d increased starch, fructan and glucose levels in canopies grown in 1200μmol mol−1, but concentrations of sucrose and fructose decreased slightly or remained unchanged. Those results may correspond with the use of fructosyl-residues and release of glucose when sucrose is consumed in fructan synthesis.  相似文献   

8.
The atmospheric CO2 concentration has increased from the pre-industrial concentration of about 280 μmol mol−1 to its present concentration of over 350 μmol mol−1, and continues to increase. As the rate of photosynthesis in C3 plants is strongly dependent on CO2 concentration, this should have a marked effect on photosynthesis, and hence on plant growth and productivity. The magnitude of photo-synthetic responses can be calculated based on the well-developed theory of photosynthetic response to intercellular CO2 concentration. A simple biochemically based model of photosynthesis was coupled to a model of stomatal conductance to calculate photosynthetic responses to ambient CO2 concentration. In the combined model, photosynthesis was much more responsive to CO2 at high than at low temperatures. At 350 μmol mol−1, photosynthesis at 35°C reached 51% of the rate that would have been possible with non-limiting CO2, whereas at 5°C, 77% of the CO2 non-limited rate was attained. Relative CO2 sensitivity also became smaller at elevated CO2, as CO2 concentration increased towards saturation. As photosynthesis was far from being saturated at the current ambient CO2 concentration, considerable further gains in photosynthesis were predicted through continuing increases in CO2 concentration. The strong interaction with temperature also leads to photosynthesis in different global regions experiencing very different sensitivities to increasing CO2 concentrations.  相似文献   

9.
Small birch plants were grown for up to 80 d in a climate chamber at varied relative addition rates of nitrogen in culture solution, and at ambient (350 μmol mol-1) or elevated (700 μmol mol-1) concentrations of CO2. The relative addition rate of nitrogen controlled relative growth rate accurately and independently of CO2 concentration at sub-optimum levels. During free access to nutrients, relative growth rate was higher at elevated CO2. Higher values of relative growth rate and net assimilation rate were associated with higher values of plant N-concentration. At all N-supply rates, elevated CO2 resulted in higher values of net assimilation rate, whereas leaf weight ratio was independent of CO2. Specific leaf area (and leaf area ratio) was less at higher CO2 and at lower rates of N-supply. Lower values of specific leaf area were partly because of starch accumulation. Nitrogen productivity (growth rate per unit plant nitrogen) was higher at elevated CO2. At sub-optimal N-supply, the higher net assimilation rate at elevated CO2 was offset by a lower leaf area ratio. Carbon dioxide did not affect root/shoot ratio, but a higher fraction of plant dry weight was found in roots at lower N-supply. In the treatment with lowest N-supply, five times as much root length was produced per amount of plant nitrogen in comparison with optimum plants. The specific fine root length at all N-supplies was greater at elevated CO2. These responses of the root system to lower N-supply and elevated CO2 may have a considerable bearing on the acquisition of nutrients in depleted soils at elevated CO2. The advantage of maintaining steady-state nutrition in small plants while investigating the effects of elevated CO2 on growth is emphasized.  相似文献   

10.
Contrasting effects of soil CO2 concentration on root respiration rates during short-term CO2 exposure, and on plant growth during long-term CO2 exposure, have been reported. Here we examine the effects of both short- and long-term exposure to soil CO2 on the root respiration of intact plants and on plant growth for bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and citrus (Citrus volkameriana Tan. & Pasq.). For rapidly growing bean plants, the growth and maintenance components of root respiration were separated to determine whether they differ in sensitivity to soil CO2. Respiration rates of citrus roots were unaffected by the CO2 concentration used during the respiration measurements (200 and 2000 μmol mol−1), regardless of the soil CO2, concentration during the previous month (600 and 20 000 μmol mol−1). Bean plants were grown with their roots exposed to either a natural CO2 diffusion gradient, or to an artificially maintained CO2 concentration of 600 or 20 000 μmol mol−1. These treatments had no effect on shoot and root growth. Growth respiration and maintenance respiration of bean roots were also unaffected by CO2 pretreatment and the CO2 concentration used during the respiration measurements (200–2000 μmol mol−1). We conclude that soil CO2 concentrations in the range likely to be encountered in natural soils do not affect root respiration in citrus or bean.  相似文献   

11.
Control coefficients were used to describe the degree to which ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) limits the steady-state rate of CO2 assimilation in sunflower leaves from plants grown at high (800 μmol mol−1) and low (350 μmol mol−1) CO2. The magnitude of a control coefficient is approximately the percentage change in the flux that would result from a 1% rise in enzyme active site concentration. In plants grown at low CO2, leaves of different ages varied considerably in their photosynthetic capacities. In a saturating light flux and an ambient CO2 concentration of 350 μmol mol−1, the Rubisco control coefficient was about 0.7 in all leaves, indicating that Rubisco activity largely limited the assimilation flux. The Rubisco control coefficient for leaves grown at 350 μmol mol−1 CO2 dropped to about zero when the ambient CO2 concentration was raised to 800 μmol mol−1. In relatively young, fully expanded leaves of plants grown at high CO2, the Rubisco control coefficient was also about 0.7 at a saturating light flux and at the CO2 concentration at which the plants were grown (800 μmol mol−1). This apparently resulted from a decrease in the concentration of Rubisco active sites. In older leaves, however, the control coefficient was about 0.2. Because, on the whole, Rubisco activity still largely limits the assimilation flux in plants grown at high CO2, the kinetics of this enzyme can still be used to model photosynthesis under these conditions. The relatively high Rubisco control coefficient under enhanced CO2 indicates that the young sunflower leaves have the capacity to acclimate their photosynthetic biochemistry in a way consistent with an optimal use of protein resources.  相似文献   

12.
Soil water deficits are likely to influence the response of crop growth and yield to changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Ca), but the extent of this influence is uncertain. To study the interaction of water deficits and Ca on crop growth, the ecosystem simulation model ecosys was tested with data for diurnal gas exchange and seasonal wheat growth measured during 1993 under high and low irrigation at Ca= 370 and 550 μmol mol?1 in the Free Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment near Phoenix, AZ. The model, supported by the data from canopy gas exchange enclosures, indicated that under high irrigation canopy conductance (gc) at Ca= 550 μmol mol?1 was reduced to about 0.75 that at Ca= 370 μmol mol?1, but that under low irrigation, gc was reduced less. Consequently when Ca was increased from 370 to 550 μmol mol?1, canopy transpiration was reduced less, and net CO2 fixation was increased more, under low irrigation than under high irrigation. The simulated effects of Ca and irrigation on diurnal gas exchange were also apparent on seasonal water use and grain yield. Simulated vs. measured seasonal water use by wheat under high irrigation was reduced by 6% vs. 4% at Ca= 550 vs. 370 μmol mol?1 but that under low irrigation was increased by 3% vs. 5%. Simulated vs. measured grain yield of wheat under high irrigation was increased by 16% vs. 8%, but that under low irrigation was increased by 38% vs. 21%. In ecosys, the interaction between Ca and irrigation on diurnal gas exchange, and hence on seasonal crop growth and water use, was attributed to a convergence of simulated gc towards common values under both Ca as canopy turgor declined. This convergence caused transpiration to decrease comparatively less, but CO2 fixation to increase comparatively more, under high vs. low Ca. Convergence of gc was in turn attributed to improved turgor maintenance under elevated Ca caused by greater storage C concentrations in the leaves, and by greater rooting density in the soil.  相似文献   

13.
Arid ecosystems, which occupy about 35% of the Earth's terrestrial surface area, are believed to be among the most responsive to elevated [CO2]. Net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) was measured in the eighth year of CO2 enrichment at the Nevada Desert Free‐Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) Facility between the months of December 2003–December 2004. On most dates mean daily NEE (24 h) (μmol CO2 m?2 s?1) of ecosystems exposed to elevated atmospheric CO2 were similar to those maintained at current ambient CO2 levels. However, on sampling dates following rains, mean daily NEEs of ecosystems exposed to elevated [CO2] averaged 23 to 56% lower than mean daily NEEs of ecosystems maintained at ambient [CO2]. Mean daily NEE varied seasonally across both CO2 treatments, increasing from about 0.1 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1 in December to a maximum of 0.5–0.6 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1 in early spring. Maximum NEE in ecosystems exposed to elevated CO2 occurred 1 month earlier than it did in ecosystems exposed to ambient CO2, with declines in both treatments to lowest seasonal levels by early October (0.09±0.03 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1), but then increasing to near peak levels in late October (0.36±0.08 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1), November (0.28±0.03 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1), and December (0.54±0.06 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1). Seasonal patterns of mean daily NEE primarily resulted from larger seasonal fluctuations in rates of daytime net ecosystem CO2 uptake which were closely tied to plant community phenology and precipitation. Photosynthesis in the autotrophic crust community (lichens, mosses, and free‐living cyanobacteria) following rains were probably responsible for the high NEEs observed in January, February, and late October 2004 when vascular plant photosynthesis was low. Both CO2 treatments were net CO2 sinks in 2004, but exposure to elevated CO2 reduced CO2 sink strength by 30% (positive net ecosystem productivity=127±17 g C m?2 yr?1 ambient CO2 and 90±11 g C m?2 yr?1 elevated CO2, P=0.011). This level of net C uptake rivals or exceeds levels observed in some forested and grassland ecosystems. Thus, the decrease in C sequestration seen in our study under elevated CO2– along with the extensive coverage of arid and semi‐arid ecosystems globally – points to a significant drop in global C sequestration potential in the next several decades because of responses of heretofore overlooked dryland ecosystems.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Stands of carrot (Daucus carota L.) were grown in the field within polyethylene-covered tunnels at a range of soil temperatures (from a mean of 7·5°C to 10·9°C) at either 348 (SE = 4·7) or 551 (SE = 7·7) μmol mol−1 CO2. The effect of increased atmospheric CO2 concentration on root yield was greater than that on total biomass. At the last harvest (137d from sowing), total biomass was 16% (95% CI = 6%, 27%) greater at 551 than at 348 μmol mol−1 CO2, and 37% (95% CI = 30%, 44%) greater as a result of a 1°C rise in soil temperature. Enrichment with CO2 or a 1°C rise in soil temperature increased root yield by 31% (95% CI = 19%, 45%) and 34% (95% CI = 27%, 42%), respectively, at this harvest. No effect on total biomass or root yield of an interaction between temperature and atmospheric CO2 concentration at 137 DAS was detected. When compared at a given leaf number (seven leaves), CO2 enrichment increased total biomass by 25% and root yields by 80%, but no effect of differences in temperature on plant weights was found. Thus, increases in total biomass and root yield observed in the warmer crops were a result of the effects of temperature on the timing of crop growth and development. Partitioning to the storage roots during early root expansion was greater at 551 than at 348 μmol mol−1 CO2. The root to total weight ratio was unaffected by differences in temperature at 551 μmol mol−1CO2, but was reduced by cooler temperatures at 348 μmol mol−1 CO2. At a given thermal time from sowing, CO2 enrichment increased the leaf area per plant, particularly during early root growth, primarily as a result of an increase in the rate of leaf area expansion, and not an increase in leaf number.  相似文献   

16.
A FACE (Free Air CO2 Enrichment) experiment was carried out on Potato (Solanum tuberosum L., cv. Primura) in 1995 in Italy. Three FACE rings were used to fumigate circular field plots of 8 m diameter while two rings were used as controls at ambient CO2 concentrations. Four CO2 exposure levels were used in the rings (ambient, 460, 560 and 660 μmol mol–1). Phenology and crop development, canopy surface temperature, above- and below-ground biomass were monitored during the growing season. Crop phenology was affected by elevated CO2, as the date of flowering was progressively anticipated in the 660, 560, 460 μmol mol–1 treatments. Crop development was not affected significantly as plant height, leaf area and the number of leaves per plant were the same in the four treatments. Elevated atmospheric CO2 levels had, instead, a significant effect on the accumulation of total nonstructural carbohydrates (TNC = soluble sugars + starch) in the leaves during a sunny day. Specific leaf area was decreased under elevated CO2 with a response that paralleled that of TNC concentrations. This reflected the occurrence of a progressive increase of photosynthetic rates and carbon assimilation in plants exposed to increasingly higher levels of atmospheric CO2. Tuber growth and final tuber yield were also stimulated by rising CO2 levels. When calculated by regression of tuber yield vs. the imposed levels of CO2concentration, yield stimulation was as large as 10% every 100 μmol mol–1 increase, which translated into over 40% enhancement in yield under 660 μmol mol–1. This was related to a higher number of tubers rather than greater mean tuber mass or size. Leaf senescence was accelerated under elevated CO2 and a linear relationship was found between atmospheric CO2 levels and leaf reflectance measured at 0.55 μm wavelength. We conclude that significant CO2 stimulation of yield has to be expected for potato under future climate scenarios, and that crop phenology will be affected as well.  相似文献   

17.
Over time, the relative effects of elevated [CO2] on the aboveground photosynthesis, growth and development of rice (Oryza sativa L.) are likely to be changed with increasing duration of CO2 exposure, but the resultant effects on rice belowground responses remain to be evaluated. To investigate the impacts of elevated [CO2] on seasonal changes in root growth, morphology and physiology of rice, a free‐air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiment was performed at Wuxi, Jiangsu, China, in 2002–2003. A japonica cultivar with large panicle was exposed to two [CO2] (ambient [CO2], 370 μmol mol−1; elevated [CO2], 570 μmol mol−1) at three levels of nitrogen (N): low (LN, 15 g N m−2), medium (MN, 25 g N m−2) and high N (HN, 35 g N m−2). Elevated [CO2] increased cumulative root volume, root dry weight, adventitious root length and adventitious root number at all developmental stages by 25–71%, which was mainly associated with increased root growth rate during early growth period (EGP) and lower rate of root senescence during late growth period (LGP), while a slight inhibition of root growth rate occurred during middle growth period (MGP). For individual adventitious roots, elevated [CO2] increased average length, volume, diameter and dry weight early in the season, but the effects gradually disappeared in subsequent stages. Total surface area and active adsorption area per unit root dry weight reached their maxima 10 days earlier in FACE vs. ambient plants, but both of them together with root oxidation ability per unit root dry weight declined with elevated [CO2] during MGP and LGP, the decline being larger during MGP than LGP. The CO2‐induced decreases in specific root activities during MGP and LGP were associated with a larger amount of root accumulation during EGP and lower N concentration and higher C/N ratio in roots during MGP and LGP in FACE vs. ambient plants. The results suggest that most of the CO2‐induced increases in shoot growth of rice are similarly associated with increased root growth.  相似文献   

18.
Soil moisture profiles can affect species composition and ecosystem processes, but the effects of increased concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide ([CO2]) on the vertical distribution of plant water uptake have not been studied. Because plant species composition affects soil moisture profiles, and is likely to shift under elevated [CO2], it is also important to test whether the indirect effects of [CO2] on soil water content may depend on species composition. We examined the effects of elevated [CO2] and species composition on soil moisture profiles in an annual grassland of California. We grew monocultures and a mixture of Avena barbata and Hemizonia congesta– the dominant species of two phenological groups – in microcosms exposed to ambient (~370 μmol mol?1) and elevated (~700 μmol mol?1) [CO2]. Both species increased intrinsic and yield‐based water use efficiency under elevated [CO2], but soil moisture increased only in communities with A. barbata, the dominant early‐season annual grass. In A. barbata monocultures, the [CO2] treatment did not affect the depth distribution of soil water loss. In contrast to communities with A. barbata, monocultures of H. congesta, a late‐season annual forb, did not conserve water under elevated [CO2], reflecting the increased growth of these plants. In late spring, elevated [CO2] also increased the efficiency of deep roots in H. congesta monocultures. Under ambient [CO2], roots below 60 cm accounted for 22% of total root biomass and were associated with 9% of total water loss, whereas in elevated [CO2], 16% of total belowground biomass was associated with 34% of total water loss. Both soil moisture and isotope data showed that H. congesta monocultures grown under elevated [CO2] began extracting water from deep soils 2 weeks earlier than plants in ambient [CO2].  相似文献   

19.
Responses of tomato leaves in a greenhouse to light and CO2 were examined at the transient stage at the end of winter, when both photoperiod and irradiance gradually increase. Additionally, CO2 fluxes were calculated for a greenhouse without supplementary lighting and without CO2 enrichment based on CO2 sinks (plant photosynthesis) and CO2 sources (plant and substrate respiration). In January, tomato leaves in the greenhouse showed low photosynthesis with a maximum assimilation of 6–8 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1, a quantum yield of 0.06 μmol CO2 μmol−1 photosynthetic active radiation (PAR) and a low light compensation point of 26 μmol PAR m−2 s−1, a combination which classifies them as shade leaves. In February, tomato leaves increased their light compensation point to 39 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 and quantum yield to 0.08, the former indicating the adaptation to increased irradiance and photoperiod. These tomato leaves increased their transpiration from 0.4 to 0.9 in January to ∼2 mmol H2O m−2 s−1 in February. Both photosynthesis and transpiration were primarily limited by light but neither by stomatal conductivity nor by CO2. In January, light response of photosynthesis, dark respiration and transpiration were negligibly affected by increasing CO2 concentrations from 600 to 900 ppm CO2 under low light conditions, indicating no benefit of CO2 enrichment unless light intensity increased. In February, tomato leaves were photoinhibited at inherent greenhouse CO2 concentrations on the first sunny day; this photoinhibition was further enhanced by an increased CO2 concentration of 1000 ppm. CO2 fluxes in the greenhouse appeared strongly dependent on solar radiation. After exceeding the light compensation point in the morning, greenhouse CO2 concentrations decreased by 58 or by 110 ppm CO2 h−1 on a sunny day in January or February and by 23 ppm on overcast days in both months. Calculated per overall tomato canopy, plant photosynthesis contributed 42–50% to the morning CO2 depletion in the greenhouse. Dark respiration of tomato leaves was ∼2 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 in January and ∼3 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 in February. This dark respiration resulted in rises of 15 and 17 ppm CO2 h−1 at night in the greenhouse compartment and was identified as primary source of CO2. Respiration of the substrate used to grow the plants, which produced 7.3 ppm CO2 h−1, was identified as secondary source of CO2. The combined plant and substrate respiration resulted in peaks of up to 900 ppm CO2 in the greenhouse before dawn.  相似文献   

20.
In Agave salmiana Otto ex Salm. var. salmiana grown for 4½ months in open-top chambers, 55% more leaves unfolded and 52% more fresh mass was produced at 730 than at 370μmol CO2 mol?1. A doubling of the CO2 concentration also stimulated growth in another highly productive CAM species, Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Miller, leading to earlier initial ion and 37% more daughter cladodes. Substantial net CO2 uptake occurred earlier in the afternoon and lasted longer through the night for A. salmiana at 730 than at 370μmol CO2 mol?1, resulting in 59% more total daily net CO2 uptake. The Michaelis constant (HCO3?) for PEPCasc was 15% lower for A. salmiana and 44% lower for O. ficus-indica when the CO2 concentration was doubled; the percentage of Rubisco in the activated state in vivo was on average 64% higher at the doubled CO2 concentration. Thus the substantial increases in net CO2 uptake and biomass production that occurred in these two CAM species when the ambient CO2 concentration was doubled resulted mainly from higher inorganic carbon levels for their carboxylating enzymes, a greater substrate affinity for PEPCase, and a greater percentage of Rubisco in the activated state.  相似文献   

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