首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The autecology and ecophysiology of two selected periphytic species of Xanthophyceae (Tribonema fonticolum and T. monochloron) were studied from seasonal pools of the inundation area, in the upper part of the Lužnice River (Třeboňsko Biosphere Reserve, Czech Republic) during winter–spring flood. Our studies have shown that these species differ in their ecological requirements (their temperature and light optima; inorganic carbon sources for photosynthesis; and also their ability to survive freezing and desiccation injuries). In our experiments, the optimal growth temperatures for both strains were higher than the temperatures of the water they were collected and isolated from. Tribonema monochloron has the rate of photosynthesis several times higher than T. fonticolum. In addition, the optimal growth temperatures were about 3–4°C lower for Tribonema monochloron than for T. fonticolum. From our results, we concluded that both strains of Tribonema prefer low intensities of irradiance. Both Tribonema strains were determined as CO2 users, but we revealed the ability of T. fonticolum to use HCO3 in small amounts. In both Tribonema strains, 100% of the cells survived freezing down to −4°C. The cells’ viability after freezing at −40, −100 and −196°C was much higher for T. monochloron (about 40%) than for T. fonticolum (about 4%). With respect to desiccation damages, at temperatures of +4 and +20°C, T. monochloron (the species better adapted to low temperatures) did not survive. In contrast, about 80% cells of T. fonticolum survived desiccation at both temperatures. Handling editor: J. Padisak.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Photosynthetic gas exchange measurements and 14CO2-fixation experiments were performed with Antarctic Prasiola crispa and Nostoc commune at low temperatures. In the case of Prasiola photosynthetic activity was found as low as-15°C, wile with Nostoc photosynthesis was suppressed below-5°C. At decreasing temperatures the metabolism of Prasiola is modified to enhance sugar phosphate synthesis, which might serve as a protective agent against freezing. The fixation pattern of Nostoc did not change near the freezing point; the total sugar phosphates amounted to approximately 50% at all temperatures tested. The differences observed may be explained by the different environments of the two algae.  相似文献   

3.
The effects on photosynthesis of CO2 and desiccation in Porphyra haitanensis were investigated to establish the effects of increased atmospheric CO2 on this alga during emersion at low tides. With enhanced desiccation, net photosynthesis, dark respiration, photosynthetic efficiency, apparent carboxylating efficiency and light saturation point decreased, while the light compensation point and CO2 compensation point increased. Emersed net photosynthesis was not saturated by the present atmospheric CO2 level (about 350?ml?m?3), and doubling the CO2 concentration (700?ml?m?3) increased photosynthesis by between 31% and 89% at moderate levels of desiccation. The relative enhancement of emersed net photosynthesis at 700?ml?m?3 CO2 was greater at higher temperatures and higher levels of desiccation. The photosynthetic production of Porphyra haitanensis may benefit from increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration during emersion.  相似文献   

4.
Desiccation and recovery of antarctic cyanobacterial mats   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Summary The ability of cyanobacterial mats from Antarctic ponds and streams to recover from desiccation is described. Mats dominated by Nostoc dehydrated rapidly and were dry within 5 h of exposure. Nostoc mats recovered to pre-desiccation rates of photosynthesis and respiration within as little as 10 min of rewetting. Recovery of acetylene reduction activity was slower (>24 h). Phormidium dominated mats were less tolerant of desiccation, and recovery on rewetting from air-drying was not complete after 10 days. Viable diaspores were, however, found in Phormidium mats which had been exposed for 3 years. Partial hydration during aerial exposure improved the survival of Phormidium mats, but appeared to slow the recovery of Nostoc mats on subsequent rewetting.  相似文献   

5.
Seed dormancy induction and alleviation in the winter‐flowering, moist temperate woodland species Galanthus nivalis and Narcissus pseudonarcissus are complex and poorly understood. Temperature, light and desiccation were investigated to elucidate their role in the germination ecophysiology of these species. The effect of different seasonal temperatures, seasonal durations, temperature fluctuations, the presence of light during different seasons and intermittent drying (during the summer period) over several ‘years’ on seed germination was investigated with outdoor and laboratory experiments. Warm summer‐like temperatures (20 °C) were necessary for germination at subsequent cooler autumn‐like temperatures (greatest at 15 °C in G. nivalis and 10 °C in N. pseudonarcissus). As the warm temperature duration increased, so did germination at subsequent cooler temperatures; further germination occurred in subsequent ‘years’ at cooler temperatures following a second, and also third, warm period. Germination was significantly greater in darkness, particularly in G. nivalis. Dormancy increased with seed maturation period in G. nivalis, because seeds extracted from green capsules germinated more readily than those from yellow capsules. Desiccation increased dormancy in an increasing proportion of N. pseudonarcissus seeds the later they were dried in ‘summer’. Seed viability was only slightly reduced by desiccation in N. pseudonarcissus, but was poor and variable in G. nivalis. Shoot formation occurred both at the temperature at which germination was greatest and also if 5 °C cooler. In summary, continuous hydration of seeds of both species during warm summer‐like temperatures results in the gradual release of seed dormancy; thereafter, darkness and cooler temperatures promote germination. Cold temperatures, increased seed maturity (G. nivalis) and desiccation (N. pseudonarcissus) increase dormancy, and light inhibits germination. © 2014 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2015, 177 , 246–262.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of temperature, light-spectrum, desiccation and salinity gradients on the photosynthesis of a Japanese subtidal brown alga, Sargassum macrocarpum (Fucales), was determined using a pulse amplitude modulation-chlorophyll fluorometer and dissolved oxygen sensors. Temperature responses of the maximum (Fv/Fm in darkness) and effective (ΔF/Fm at 50 μmol photons m−2 s−1; = ΦPSII) quantum yields during 6-day culture (4–36°C) remained high at 12–28°C, but decreased at higher temperatures. Nevertheless, ΔF/Fm also dropped at temperatures below 8°C, suggesting light sensitivity under chilling temperatures because Fv/Fm remained high. Photosynthesis–irradiance responses at 24°C under red (660 nm), green (525 nm), blue (450 nm) and white light (metal halide lamp) showed that maximum net photosynthesis under blue and white light was greater than under red and green light, indicating the sensitivity and photosynthetic availability of blue light in the subtidal light environment. In the desiccation experiment, samples under aerial exposure of up to 8 h under dim-light at 24°C and 50% humidity showed that ΔF/Fm quickly declined after more than 45 min of emersion; furthermore, ΔF/Fm also failed to recover to initial levels even after 1 day of rehydration in seawater. Under the emersion state, the ΔF/Fm remained high when the relative water content (RWC) was greater than 50%; in contrast, it quickly dropped when the RWC was less than 50%. When the RWC was reduced below 50%, ΔF/Fm did not return to initial levels, regardless of subsequent re-hydration, suggesting a low capacity of photosynthesis to recover from desiccation. The stenohaline response of photosynthesis under 3-day culture is evident, given that ΔF/Fm declined when salinity was beyond 20–40 psu. Adaptation to subtidal environments in temperate waters of Japan can be linked to these traits.  相似文献   

7.
The freezing and desiccation tolerance of 12 Klebsormidium strains, isolated from various habitats (aeroterrestrial, terrestrial, and hydro-terrestrial) from distinct geographical regions (Antarctic — South Shetlands, King George Island, Arctic — Ellesmere Island, Svalbard, Central Europe — Slovakia) were studied. Each strain was exposed to several freezing (−4°C, −40°C, −196°C) and desiccation (+4°C and + 20°C) regimes, simulating both natural and semi-natural freeze-thaw and desiccation cycles. The level of resistance (or the survival capacity) was evaluated by chlorophyll a content, viability, and chlorophyll fluorescence evaluations. No statistical differences (Kruskal-Wallis tests) between strains originating from different regions were observed. All strains tested were highly resistant to both freezing and desiccation injuries. Freezing down to −196°C was the most harmful regime for all studied strains. Freezing at −4°C did not influence the survival of studied strains. Further, freezing down to −40°C (at a speed of 4°C/min) was not fatal for most of the strains. RDA analysis showed that certain Antarctic and Arctic strains did not survive desiccation at +4°C; however, freezing at −40°C, as well as desiccation at +20°C was not fatal to them. On the other hand, other strains from the Antarctic, the Arctic, and Central Europe (Slovakia) survived desiccation at temperatures of +4°C, and freezing down to −40°C. It appears that species of Klebsormidium which occupy an environment where both seasonal and diurnal variations of water availability prevail, are well adapted to freezing and desiccation injuries. Freezing and desiccation tolerance is not species-specific nor is the resilience only found in polar strains as it is also a feature of temperate strains. Presented at the International Symposium Biology and Taxonomy of Green Algae V, Smolenice, June 26–29, 2007, Slovakia. This paper is dedicated to the memory of the late Dr. Bohuslav Fott (1908–1976), Professor of Botany at the Charles University in Prague, to mark the centenary of his birth.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of variable autumn temperatures in combination with decreasing irradiance and daylength on photosynthesis, growth cessation and freezing tolerance was investigated in northern‐ and southern‐adapted populations of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and timothy (Phleum pratense) intended for use in regions at northern high latitudes. Plants were subjected to three different acclimation temperatures; 12, 6 and 9/3°C (day/night) for 4 weeks, followed by 1 week of cold acclimation at 2°C under natural light conditions. This experimental setup was repeated at three different periods during autumn with decreasing sums of irradiance and daylengths. Photoacclimation, leaf elongation and freezing tolerance were studied. The results showed that plants cold acclimated during the period with lowest irradiance and shortest day had lowest freezing tolerance, lowest photosynthetic activity, longest leaves and least biomass production. Higher acclimation temperature (12°C) resulted in lower freezing tolerance, lower photosynthetic activity, faster leaf elongation rate and higher biomass compared with the other temperatures. Photochemical mechanisms were predominant in photoacclimation. The northern‐adapted populations had a better freezing tolerance than the southern‐adapted except when grown during the late autumn period and at the highest temperature; then there were no differences between the populations. Our results indicate that the projected climate change in the north may reduce freezing tolerance in grasses as acclimation will take place at higher temperatures and shorter daylengths with lower irradiance.  相似文献   

9.
Microbialites are organosedimentary deposits that have built up as a result of the growth and binding of detrital sediment by a benthic microbial community. This study focuses on microbialites built by monospecific populations of cyanobacteria in the south-west lagoon of New Caledonia, where they have been observed down to 20–25 m depth. The aim was to study their photosynthetic and respiratory responses to various light intensities. The Phormidium sp. TK1 microbialite was collected at 19 m depth and the P. crosbyanum (Tilden) microbialite was collected at 0.5 and 13 m depth. Phormidium sp. TK1 showed all the characteristic features of a low-light adapted species. The initial slope of the Photosynthesis versus Irradiance curve for this microbialite was close to the maximum quantum yield indicating an efficient light absorption and utilization at low light. The photosynthesis maximum was located 0.2–0.4 mm below the surface and did not shift with changing light intensity. Respiration rates were low and not enhanced by light; photoinhibition was observed at higher light intensities. In Phormidium crosbyanum (Tilden) microbialites, the photosynthesis maximum shifted downward to lower depths with increasing light, probably as a result of phototactic migration of cyanobacterial filaments, and light-enhanced respiration was observed at light intensities above light saturation. The photosynthetic para- meters measured in P. crosbyanum indicate that P. crosbyanum is capable of photo-acclimation at high light intensities. The gross productivity of the different microbialites was comparable to values measured in cyanobacterial stromatolites observed in other shallow environments. However, the microbialites studied here were characterized by a lower respiration / production ratio which indicates a higher growth efficiency.  相似文献   

10.
Measurements were made of the amount of liquid water present in the epidermal cells of onion at various degrees of dehydration caused by slow extracellular freezing and by desiccation. This was achieved by using a pulsed NMR spectrometer during freezing stress and by weighing the epidermal pieces during desiccation. Measurements were made on the extent of cell survival by direct microscopic observation (plasmolysis and protoplasmic streaming). Onion epidermal cells (Allium cepa L. cv. Downing Yellow Globe) were found to survive freezing temperatures as low as –20°C and an equivalent desiccation stress. This equivalence opposes the reports by others on Hordeum vulgare and on Solanum sp. of greater injury by freezing than by an equivalent dehydration due to desiccation. The discrepancy -has been explained in terms of the limitations of the conductivity method used by those authors to evaluate the injury. The freezing and desiccation curves correspond to the equation: L t=L0Δtm/t+Lu where Lt and L0 are the amounts of liquid water at temperature t and O°C respectively. Δtm is the freezing point depression of the cell sap and Lu is the amount of liquid water which does not freeze. These results demonstrate that the dehydration of onion cells during both freezing and desiccation duplicates the dehydration of ordinary aqueous solutions. This was equally true for living and dead cells, and suggests that the negative turgor invoked by others is not significantly involved in the dehydration of living Allium cepa epidermis cells. An explanation is proposed for these contradictory results.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Three species of Arctic to cold-temperate amphi-Atlantic algae, all occurring also in the North Pacific, were tested for growth and/or survival at temperatures of −20 to 30°C. When isolates from both western and eastern Atlantic shores were tested side-by-side, it was found that thermal ecotypes may occur in such Arctic algae.Chaetomorpha melagonium was the most eurythermal of the 3 species. Isolates of this alga were alike in temperature tolerance and growth rate but Icelandic plants were more sensitive to the lethal temperature of 25°C than were more southerly isolates from both east and west. With regard toDevaleraea ramentacea, one Canadian isolate grew extraordinarily well at −2 and 0°C, and all tolerated temperatures 2–3°C higher than the lethal limit (18–20°C) of isolates from Europe. ConcerningPhycodrys rubens, both eastern and western isolates died at 20°C but European plants tolerated the lethal high temperature longer, were more sensitive to freezing, and attained more rapid growth at optimal temperatures. The intertidal species,C. melagonium andD. ramentacea, both survived freezing at −5 and −20°C, at least for short time periods.C. melagonium was more susceptible thanD. ramentacea to desiccation. Patterns of thermal tolerance may provide insight into the evolutionary history of seaweed species.  相似文献   

13.
Botryococcus braunii Kützing, a green colonial microalga, occurs worldwide in both freshwater and brackish water environments. Despite considerable attention to B. braunii as a potential source of renewable fuel, many ecophysiological properties of this alga remain unknown. Here, we examined the desiccation and temperature tolerances of B. braunii using two newly isolated strains BOD-NG17 and BOD-GJ2. Both strains survived through 6- and 8-month desiccation treatments but not through a 12-month treatment. Interestingly, the desiccation-treated cells of B. braunii gained tolerance to extreme temperature shifts, i.e., high temperature (40 °C) and freezing (?20 °C). Both strains survived for at least 4 and 10 days at 40 and ?20 °C, respectively, while the untreated cells barely survived at these temperatures. These traits would enable long-distance dispersal of B. braunii cells and may account for the worldwide distribution of this algal species. Extracellular substances such as polysaccharides and hydrocarbons seem to confer the desiccation tolerance.  相似文献   

14.
Porphyra perforata is a common seaweed inhabiting the upper intertidal zone, and as a consequence it experiences great fluctuations in tissue temperature and desiccation. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of ambient temperature and the tissue desiccation status on the photosynthetic performance of P. perforata. Photosynthetic performance was evaluated polarographically after the temperature or desiccation treatments. Maximum photosynthesis (Pmax) occurred between 25 and 30° C and decreased at higher and lower temperatures, however, no significant differences were observed in the initial slope of photosynthesis (α) from 10 to 30° C. This suggests that the photosynthetic efficiency of this species does not decrease as a result of fluctuating temperatures during tidal emergence/submergence. Pmax and α were relatively constant in tissue of P. perforata with 5 to 100% relative water content. This also suggests that natural desiccation rates during low tides do not decrease photosynthetic rates in this species. Variations in the synthesis of specific proteins as a result of fluctuations in temperature and relative water content in the tissue of P. perforata are being studied.  相似文献   

15.
1. Three common species of freshwater phytoplankton, the diatom Nitzschia sp., green alga Sphaerocystis schroeteri and cyanobacterium Phormidium luridum, were grown under contrasting daylengths [18 : 6 h light : dark cycles (LD) versus 6 : 18 h LD] and phosphorus (P) regimes (P‐sufficient versus 1 μm P). The rates of growth and photosynthesis, as well as growth efficiencies and pigment concentrations, were compared among treatments. 2. The growth and photosynthetic parameters of the three species depended on both P status and daylength in a species‐specific way. The responses to P limitation depended on daylength and, conversely, the responses to daylength depended on P status. 3. Growth rates and the maximum rates of photosynthesis (Pmax) of all species decreased under P limitation under both light regimes. However, the decrease of Pmax because of P limitation was greater under long daylength. The Pmax of the green alga S. schroeteri decreased the most (ca. sixfold) under P limitation compared with the other two species. The photosynthesis saturation parameter Ik also decreased under P limitation; the decline was significant in Nitzschia and Sphaerocystis. P‐limitation significantly increased photoinhibition (β) in Nitzschia and Sphaerocystis, but not in Phormidium. The excess photochemical capacity (the ratio of the maximum photosynthesis rate to the photosynthesis rate at the growth irradiance), characterising the ability to utilise fluctuating light, was significantly lower under P limitation. 4. The growth efficiency (growth rate normalised to daylength) declined with increasing daylength in all species. Under short daylength the cyanobacterium Phormidium had the lowest growth efficiency of the three species. 5. The cellular chlorophyll a concentration in both Nitzschia and Sphaerocystis was significantly higher under short daylength, but only under P‐sufficient conditions. In Nitzschia, under short daylength, P‐limitation significantly decreased cellular chlorophyll concentration. In contrast, P‐limitation increased cellular chlorophyll concentration in Sphaerocystis, but under long daylength only. The ratio of chlorophyll a to b in the green alga also declined under short daylength and under P‐limited conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Thermal acclimation and photoacclimation of photosynthesis were compared in Laminaria saccharina sporophytes grown at temperatures of 5 and 17 °C and irradiances of 15 and 150μmol photons m?2 s?1. When measured at a standard temperature (17°C), rates of light-saturated photosynthesis (Pmax) were higher in 5 °C-grown algae (c. 3.0 μmol O2 m?2 s?1) than in 17 °C-grown algae (c. 0.9 μmol O2 m-2 s-1). Concentrations of Rubisco were also 3-fold higher (per unit protein) in 5 °C-grown algae than in algae grown at 17 °C. Light-limited photosynthesis responded similarly to high temperature and low light Photon yields (α) were higher in algae grown at high temperature (regardless of light), and at 5 °C in low light, than in algae grown at 5 °C in high light Differences in a were correlated with light absorption; both groups of 17 °C algae and 5 °C low-light algae absorbed c. 75% of incident light, whereas 5 °C high-light algae absorbed c. 55%. Increased absorption was correlated with increases in pigment content PSII reaction centre densities and the fucoxanthin-Chl ale protein complex (FCP). Changes in a were also attributed, in part, to changes in the maximum photon yield of photosynthesis (0max). PSI reaction centre densities were unaffected by growth temperature, but the areal concentration of PSI in low-light-grown algae was twice that of high-light-grown algae (c. 160.0 versus 80.0 nmol m?2). We suggest that complex metabolic regulation allows L, saccharina to optimize photosynthesis over the wide range of temperatures and light levels encountered in nature.  相似文献   

17.
Cold, freezing, and desiccation tolerance were examined in the limpet, Acmaea digitalis (Eschscholtz). Fifty percent of the experimental population survived freezing at temperatures between ?10 ° and ?12 °C for at least 24 hr. In this temperature range, 60–80 % of the body water was frozen. The LD50 for water loss by desiccation was 76.5% ± 1.3δ. At 70–80% body water loss, solutes were concentrated between 350 and 500%. Some limpets failed to survive immersion in 450% seawater for 6 hr (100% scawater = salinity of 31‰), suggesting that much of the damage from freezing and desiccation was from an increased solute concentration. No glycerol could be detected in extracts of the foot and the visceral mass of A. digitalis during winter, confirming similar results in studies carried out on other intertidal molluscs.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The effects of osmotic dehydration and freezing on photosynthesis were studied in the brown alga Fucus distichus L. The data indicated that F. distichus exhibits similar physiological responses to both osmotic dehydration and freezing stress and that these responses resemble those in the literature for the effect of desiccation in air. Both stresses inhibited light-limited (Psubsat) and light-saturated (Pmax) photosynthesis measured immediately after plants were reimmersed in seawater. The degree of initial inhibition and subsequent recovery of photosynthesis were proportional to the severity of the dehydration or freezing treatment. Psubsat and Pmax recovered completely from osmotic dehydration for 3 h in 200% and 3 hr at – 10°C, but recovery was only partial following 3 h in 300%o or 3 h at – 15°C. In most cases, recovery was complete within 2 h following dehydration, with little further recovery occurring between 2 and 24 h posttreatment. No time-dependent recovery occurred following severe freezing. Observations using the vital stain fluorescein diacetate suggested that the lack of complete recovery might be due to severe damage or death of a proportion of cells in the thallus. There were no clear effects of either osmotic dehydration or freezing on dark respiration (Rd), although Rd was stimulated in all emersed treatments (frozen plants and 5° C controls) immediately following reimmersion. Measurement of chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics indicated that both osmotic dehydration and freezing reduced the ratio of variable to maximum florescence (Fv/Fm), indicating a decrease in the quantum efficiency of photosystem I. Based on these data, we suggest that there are common cellular and physiological components involved in the response of fucoid algae to a range of water stresses. This hypothesis was supported by experiments that showed that osmoacclimation in hyperosmotic seawater (51%o)for 2 weeks increased the ability of F. distichus to recover from freezing at – 15° C. During acclimation, mannitol content increased under hyperosmotic conditions and decreased under hypoosmotic conditions. Changes in plasma membrane integrity, determined by fresh weight: dry weight ratio, and amino acid release following freezing indicated an increasing gradient of freezing tolerance from low to high salinity. However, none of these physiological changes fully explained the marked increase in the freezing tolerance of photosynthesis observed in plants acclimated under hyperosmotic conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Previously reported transplantation experiments in the field showed that Gastroclonium coulteri (Harvey) Kylin could survive above its normal intertidal range (0.0–0.5 m above MLLW), except during periods of daytime low tides in spring. Net photosynthetic rate measurements in the laboratory were performed to determine which physical factors might determine the upper boundary for this species in the intertidal zone. Maximum net photosynthesis occurred between 15 and 20° C, but remained positive between 4 and 35° C. The air temperature extremes observed in the field were 2° C (only seen once) and 26° C. Net photosynthesis increased as expected with light intensity to the highest value obtainable in the laboratory, 1400 μEin m?2 s?1. Plants collected from the field under higher light intensity (up to 2000 μEin m?2 s?2) also showed high rates of photosynthesis. Neither the temperature nor light levels observed in the field were directly damaging to photosynthesis. Desiccation, however, resulted in a sharp decrease in both photosynthesis and respiration. G. coulteri fully recovered from successive daily treatments of about 35% desiccation, but not from successive treatments of 50% desiccation. One exposure to 70% desiccation allowed no recovery of photosynthetic capacity.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号