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1.
We examined how the freely floating macrophyte, Stratiotes aloides L., sampled from a CO2-supersaturated pond, changes leaf morphology, photosynthesis and inorganic carbon acquisition during its different submerged and emerged life stages in order to evaluate whether S. aloides requires consistently supersaturated CO2 conditions to grow and complete its life cycle. Submerged rosettes formed from over-wintering turions had typical traits of submerged plants with high specific leaf area and low chlorophyll a concentrations. Emergent leaf parts of mature, floating specimens had typical terrestrial traits with stomata, low specific leaf area and high chlorophyll a content, while offsets formed vegetatively and basal, submerged parts of mature plants showed traits in between. All submerged leaf types exhibited some ability to use HCO3 but only rosettes formed from turions had efficient HCO3 use. Rosettes also had the highest CO2 affinity and maximum CO2-saturated photosynthesis in water. Half-saturation constants for CO2 (21–74 μM CO2) were for all submerged leaf parts 5–140 times lower than the concentrations of free CO2 in the pond (350–2800 μM CO2). Emergent leaves were less efficient in water but had significantly higher photosynthesis than submerged, mature leaf parts in air, and rates of photosynthesis of emergent leaves in air were three to five times higher than rates of CO2-saturated photosynthesis of the three submerged leaf types in water. Underwater photosynthetic rates estimated at CO2 concentrations corresponding to air equilibrium were not sufficiently high to support any noticeable growth except for rosettes, in which bicarbonate utilization combined with high CO2 affinity resulted in photosynthetic rates corresponding to almost 34% of maximum rates at high free CO2. We conclude that S. aloides requires consistently high CO2-supersaturation to support high growth and to complete its life cycle, and we infer that this requirement explains why S. aloides mainly grows in ponds, ditches and reed zones that are characterized by strong CO2-supersaturation.  相似文献   

2.
《Aquatic Botany》2009,90(4):379-384
We examined how the freely floating macrophyte, Stratiotes aloides L., sampled from a CO2-supersaturated pond, changes leaf morphology, photosynthesis and inorganic carbon acquisition during its different submerged and emerged life stages in order to evaluate whether S. aloides requires consistently supersaturated CO2 conditions to grow and complete its life cycle. Submerged rosettes formed from over-wintering turions had typical traits of submerged plants with high specific leaf area and low chlorophyll a concentrations. Emergent leaf parts of mature, floating specimens had typical terrestrial traits with stomata, low specific leaf area and high chlorophyll a content, while offsets formed vegetatively and basal, submerged parts of mature plants showed traits in between. All submerged leaf types exhibited some ability to use HCO3 but only rosettes formed from turions had efficient HCO3 use. Rosettes also had the highest CO2 affinity and maximum CO2-saturated photosynthesis in water. Half-saturation constants for CO2 (21–74 μM CO2) were for all submerged leaf parts 5–140 times lower than the concentrations of free CO2 in the pond (350–2800 μM CO2). Emergent leaves were less efficient in water but had significantly higher photosynthesis than submerged, mature leaf parts in air, and rates of photosynthesis of emergent leaves in air were three to five times higher than rates of CO2-saturated photosynthesis of the three submerged leaf types in water. Underwater photosynthetic rates estimated at CO2 concentrations corresponding to air equilibrium were not sufficiently high to support any noticeable growth except for rosettes, in which bicarbonate utilization combined with high CO2 affinity resulted in photosynthetic rates corresponding to almost 34% of maximum rates at high free CO2. We conclude that S. aloides requires consistently high CO2-supersaturation to support high growth and to complete its life cycle, and we infer that this requirement explains why S. aloides mainly grows in ponds, ditches and reed zones that are characterized by strong CO2-supersaturation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
1. We analysed photosynthetic rates and inorganic carbon use of thirty-five vascular macrophyte species collected submerged in eight nutrient- and CO2-rich Danish lowland streams. The species were classified in four groups as mainly terrestrial, homophyllous and heterophyllous amphibious and truly submerged. These groups represent plant species differently adapted to life in water. 2. Photosynthetic rates measured in water increased in the gradual transition from mainly terrestrial, through amphibious to truly submerged species. Species normally in contact with air adapted to submergence by increasing the photosynthetic rate at limiting CO2. Photosynthetic rates of submerged parts of heterophyllous amphibious species were close to those of submerged species. Submerged species with thin or finely dissected leaves had the highest photosynthetic rates, probably because of low diffusional resistance to uptake of nutrients and gases. 3. In contrast to submerged species, terrestrial and amphibious species were unable to use HCO3?. Extensive oversaturation with CO2 in the streams allows, however, many amphibious species to photosynthesize well under water, based on CO2-use alone. Amphibious CO2-users, with very few structural adaptations to life under water, can therefore be as dominant in the submerged vegetation of lowland streams as HCO3?-using water plants. Moreover, the streams provide open space for colonization from the dense vegetation ashore. 4. Among the 1265 Danish herbaceous species no less than seventy-five terrestrial species occasionally grow submerged, forty-five species are amphibious, and fifty-one are true water plants. These numbers suggest that adaptation to permanent or temporary submergence is an ongoing process involving many species and that the land-water interface does not represent as difficult a barrier as often believed.  相似文献   

5.
Hidema J  Makino A  Mae T  Ojima K 《Plant physiology》1991,97(4):1287-1293
Effects of irradiance on photosynthetic characteristics were examined in senescent leaves of rice (Oryza sativa L.). Two irradiance treatments (100 and 20% natural sunlight) were imposed after the full expansion of the 13th leaf through senescence. The photosynthetic rate was measured as a function of intercellular CO2 pressure with a gas-exchange system. The amounts of cytochrome f, coupling factor 1, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), and chlorophyll were determined. The coupling factor 1 and cytochrome f contents decreased rapidly during senescence, and their rates of decrease were much faster from the 20% sunlight treatment than from the full sunlight treatment. These changes were well correlated with those in the photosynthetic rate at CO2 pressure = 600 microbars, but not with those under the ambient air condition (350 microbars CO2) and 200 microbars CO2. This suggested that the amounts of coupling factor 1 and cytochrome f from the full sunlight treatment cannot be limiting factors for the photosynthetic rate at ambient air conditions. The Rubisco content also decreased during senescence, but its decrease from the 20% sunlight treatment was appreciably retarded. However, this difference was not reflected in the photosynthetic rates at the ambient and 200 microbars CO2. This implied that in vivo Rubisco activity may be regulated in the senescent leaves from the 20% sunlight treatment. The chlorophyll content decreased most slowly. In the 20% sunlight treatment, it remained apparently constant with a decline in chlorophyll a/b ratio. These photosynthetic characteristics of the senescent rice leaves under low irradiance were discussed in relation to acclimation of shade plants.  相似文献   

6.
The photosynthetic productivity of the intertidal communities dominated by the seagrass Zostera noltii and the cordgrass Spartina maritima was assessed in two contrasting situations during a tidal cycle, i.e., air exposure and water immersion. Two complementary methods were used: infra red gas analysis of CO2 flux measurements in whole communities and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements of individual plants photosynthetic activity. Higher photosynthetic rates of Z. noltii in air were observed both at the individual plants response level determined by chlorophyll fluorescence and at the community level measured as gas exchange (CO2 uptake). S. maritima plants consistently showed low photosynthetic response when immersed. Gross community production (GCP) measured as carbon dioxide uptake was always higher in air than in water for both communities. When immersed, the GCP of both communities was similar. However, when exposed to the air, the GCP of the S. maritima community was higher than the one of Z. noltii's. The key factor in CO2 assimilation by air-exposed Z. noltii was the retention of water in sediment microdepressions. During low tide, depressions in the sediment retain a considerable amount of water, enough to maintain leaf hydration. In these conditions, rapid air-water CO2 diffusion occurs, making it readily available to plants. The community gas exchange measurements compared well with the fluorescence indications. Both Z. noltii and S. maritima were shown to be responsible for the overall pattern of photosynthetic carbon fixation within their respective communities, both during submersion and emersion periods. The short-term incubations method described in this report proved to be a valuable tool for field measurements of intertidal lagoon productivity. It provides fast and precise values of carbon dioxide fixation, both in submerged and air-exposed communities.  相似文献   

7.
There is continuing controversy over whether a degree of C4 photosynthetic metabolism exists in ears of C3 cereals. In this context, CO2 exchange and the initial products of photosynthesis were examined in flag leaf blades and various ear parts of two durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) and two six-rowed barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cultivars. Three weeks after anthesis, the CO2 compensation concentration at 210 mmol mol?1 O2 in durum wheat and barley ear parts was similar to or greater than that in flag leaves. The O2 dependence of the CO2 compensation concentration in durum wheat ear parts, as well as in the flag leaf blade, was linear, as expected for C3 photosynthesis. In a complementary experiment, intact and attached ears and flag leaf blades of barley and durum wheat were radio-labelled with 14CO2 during a 10s pulse, and the initial products of fixation were studied in various parts of the ears (awns, glumes, inner bracts and grains) and in the flag leaf blade. All tissues assimilated CO2 mainly by the Calvin (C3) cycle, with little fixation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate (about 10% or less). These collective data support the conclusion that in the ear parts of these C3 cereals C4 photosynthetic metabolism is nil.  相似文献   

8.
Araus JL  Tapia L 《Plant physiology》1987,85(3):667-673
The rate of net CO2 assimilation (A), the stomatal (gs) and residual (gr) conductances to CO2, the intercellular CO2 concentration, the CO2 compensation points at 21% O221) and at 2% O22), and the amounts of dry matter, nitrogen, and carbohydrates were determined, from anthesis through grain filling, in the flag leaf blade and sheath of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Kolibri). The nitrogen content and the rate of net CO2 assimilation declined slowly until the onset of senescence in both organs, about 3 weeks after anthesis. During senescence the reduction of A in both organs was not primarily caused by a decrease in gs; the main factor is the decrease in gr. From values of Γ21 and Γ2 it is suggested that the rate of respiration in the light contributing to the CO2 compensation point is higher in sheaths than in blades irrespective of the O2 level considered. The role of sheaths storing and later transporting assimilates to the developing grains seems to be more important for shoot yield than that of sheaths functioning as photosynthetic organs after the onset of senescence occurs. It is suggested that accumulation of carbohydrates in leaves might somehow trigger senescence in the flag leaf blade and sheath simultaneously.  相似文献   

9.
Haberlea rhodopensis is a homoiochlorophyllous resurrection plant that shows a low rate of leaf net CO2 uptake (4–6 μmol m?2 s?1) under saturating photosynthetic photon flux densities in air (21% O2 and about 390 ppm CO2). However, leaf net CO2 uptake reaches values of 17–18 μmol m?2 s?1 under saturating CO2 and light. H. rhodopensis leaves have a very low mesophyll CO2 conductance that can partly explain the low rate of leaf net CO2 uptake in normal air. Experimental evidences suggest that mesophyll conductance is not sensitive to temperature in the 20–35 °C range. In addition, it is shown that the (1) transpiration rate of H. rhodopensis is nearly linearly related to the vapour pressure difference between the leaf and the ambient air within the interval from 0.5 kPa to 2.5 kPa at a leaf temperature of 25 °C and (2) leaf net CO2 uptake in normal air under saturating light does not change much with leaf temperature (between 20 °C and 30 °C). At a leaf relative water content of between 90% and 30%, the decrease of leaf net CO2 assimilation during drought can be explained by a decrease of leaf CO2 diffusional conductance. Accordingly the non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching decreases only at relative water contents lower than 20%, indicating that photosynthetic activity maintains a trans-thylakoidal proton gradient over a wide range of leaf water contents. Moreover, PSII photochemistry (as estimated by the Fv/Fm ratio and the thermoluminescence B band intensity) is only affected at leaf relative water contents lower than about 20%, thus confirming that primary photosynthetic reactions are resistant to drought. Interestingly, the effect of leaf desiccation on photosynthetic capacity, measured at very high ambient CO2 molar ratios under saturating PPFD, is identical to that observed for three non-resurrection C3 mesophytes. This demonstrates that the photosynthetic apparatus of H. rhodopensis is not more resistant to desiccation when compared to other C3 plants. Since the leaf area decreases by more than 50% when the leaf relative water content is reduced to about 40% during drought it is supposed, following Farrant et al. [Farrant, J.M., Vander, W.C., Lofell, D.A., Bartsch, S., Whittaker, A., 2003. An investigation into the role of light during desiccation of three angiosperms resurrection plants. Plant Cell Environ. 26, 1275–1286], that H. rhodopensis leaf cells avoid mechanical stress.  相似文献   

10.
Regeneration capacity of submerged rice (Oryza sativa) seedlings in terms of CO2 photosynthetic rate, chlorophyll a fluorescence and chlorophyll and carbohydrate content were investigated in three Indica rice cultivars namely FR 13A, Kalaputia and IR 42 that differed in submergence tolerance. Twenty-one day old plants were completely submerged under water for 8 days. Subsequently, plants were kept under normal conditions with 5–10 cm of stagnant water above soil surface for a further period of 15 days. After complete submergence, all genotypes showed inhibition of CO2 photosynthetic rate. Submergence treatment resulted in a significant reduction of Rubisco activity. Maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) of PS II and area above the fluorescence curve between Fo and Fm decreased more under submergence especially in susceptible cultivar IR 42. When re-aerated, the plants recovered to various degrees. The carbohydrate content of plants was found to be significantly and positively associated with submergence tolerance and regeneration growth. The tolerant cultivar (FR 13A) could survive submergence apparently because it possessed 1.9–2.0 and 3.2–3.7-fold more non-structural carbohydrate content before and after submergence compared to the susceptible cultivar (IR 42) and it had a better capability to restore its photosynthetic capacity during post-submergence periods.  相似文献   

11.
Luronium natans (L.) Raf. (Floating Water-plantain) is an endangered amphibious freshwater species endemic to Europe. We examined the plasticity in carbon acquisition and photosynthesis in L. natans to assess if lack of plasticity could contribute to explain the low competitive ability of the species. The plasticity of photosynthesis in submerged leaves towards inorganic carbon availability was examined and the photosynthesis of submerged, floating and aerial leaves was contrasted. L. natans was shown to be plastic in inorganic carbon uptake, as it was able to effectively acclimate to changed concentrations of free-CO2. The photosynthetic apparatus was down-regulated in plants grown at high CO2. Chlorophyll concentration, Rubisco activity and maximum photosynthesis were significantly lower in submerged leaves of plants grown at high CO2 (200 μM free-CO2) compared to plants grown at low CO2 (18 μM free-CO2). Furthermore, bicarbonate utilization was down-regulated in response to high CO2. Carbon acquisition of submerged, floating and aerial leaves of L. natans differed significantly. The aerial leaves were superior in photosynthesising in air and, surprisingly, the floating leaves had the highest rates of photosynthesis in water. The study did not support the hypothesis that the low competitive ability of L. natans is caused by inefficient photosynthesis or a lack of plasticity in photosynthesis. However, the somewhat low photosynthetic performance of the submerged leaves may be a contributing factor.  相似文献   

12.
Fu QA  Ehleringer JR 《Plant physiology》1989,91(3):1162-1167
Heliotropic leaf movements were examined in common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris cv Blue Lake Bush) under outdoor and laboratory conditions. Heliotropic leaf movements in well-watered plants were partly controlled by temperature, and appeared to be independent of atmospheric humidity and CO2 concentration. When environmental conditions were held constant in the laboratory, increased air temperature caused bean leaves to orient more obliquely to a light source. Ambient CO2, intercellular CO2, and net photosynthesis were not correlated with the temperature-induced changes in heliotropic movements, nor did they significantly affect these movements directly. The effect of air temperature on leaf movements need not be mediated through a change in leaf water potential, transpiration, or leaf conductance. Air temperature modified laminar orientation in light through its effect on tissue temperature in the pulvinal region, not that of the lamina or petiole. However, under darkness the temperature effects on leaf movements were not expressed. Active heliotropic movements in response to air temperature allowed lamina temperature to remain close to the thermal optimum of photosynthesis. This temperature effect underlies a commonly observed pattern of leaf movements under well-watered conditions: a tendency for leaves to face the sun more obliquely on hot days than cool days.  相似文献   

13.
1. The influence of current velocity on the pattern of photosynthetic CO2 uptake in three species of submerged stream macrophytes was described by analysing the grain density in autoradiographs of leaves exposed to 14CO2. 2. In Elodea canadensis, the CO2 uptake was approximately two‐fold higher near the leaf periphery compared with the midrib section at high current velocity, whereas at low current velocity the area of relatively high CO2 uptake expanded from the leaf periphery towards the midrib and basal sections of the leaves. 3. In Potamogeton crispus and Callitriche stagnalis the CO2 uptake was uniform throughout the leaves at low current velocity, whereas at high current velocity the CO2 uptake appeared to increase randomly in some areas of the leaves. 4. The relationship between the photosynthetic CO2 uptake pattern and the dynamics of flow surrounding submerged shoots at low and high current velocity is discussed in relation to shoot morphology. In E. canadensis, thick diffusive boundary layers may develop between leaves because of screening effects at high current velocity. Increased diffusion path for CO2 may contribute to inhibitory effects on photosynthesis in this species.  相似文献   

14.
Terry N  Ulrich A 《Plant physiology》1974,54(3):379-381
The effects of Mg deficiency on the photosynthesis and respiration of sugar beets (Beta vulgaris L. cv. F58-554H1) were studied by withholding Mg from the culture solution and by following changes in CO2 and water vapor exchange of attached leaves. Leaf blade Mg concentration decreased from about 1200 to less than 200 meq kg−1 dry matter without change in the rate of photosynthetic CO2 uptake per unit leaf area, while from 200 to 50 meq kg−1 the rate decreased to one-third. Rates of photorespiratory evolution of CO2 into CO2-free air responded to Mg like those of photosynthetic CO2 uptake, the rates decreasing to one-half, below 200 meq kg−1. Respiratory CO2 evolution in the dark increased almost 2-fold in low Mg leaves. Magnesium deficiency had less effect on leaf (mainly stomatal) diffusion resistance (r1) than on mesophyll resistance (rm); in Mg-deficient plants rm increased from 2.9 to 7.1 sec cm−1, whereas r1 became significantly greater than the control value only in the most severe instances of Mg deficiency.  相似文献   

15.
The observation that exposure of the leaf canopy to increasing concentrations of CO2 (100-400 μl/l) decreases the influx of nitrate to the leaf blades, but not to the roots or stalks (largely leaf sheaths), was reconfirmed using 15NO3. Decreases in leaf nitrate supply were associated with decreases in induction of nitrate reductase, thus supporting the view that the influx of nitrate to a tissue is a major factor in regulation of the level of nitrate reductase. The whole plant 15N distribution data show that the CO2 effects were due to decreased influx of nitrate into the leaf blade rather than CO2-enhanced nitrate reduction. The decreases in nitrate accumulation by the leaf blade with increases in CO2 concentration were only partially accounted for by differences in transpiration. Because the initial malate concentration of root tissue (detopped plants) had no subsequent effect on nitrate uptake, it seems unlikely that high levels of malate induced by CO2 were responsible for the exclusion of nitrate from the leaf blades.  相似文献   

16.
Using a manometric method, photosynthetic oxygen evolution and 14CO2 fixation have been determined for leaf tissue of Triticum aestivum L., Hordeum vulgare L., Phaseolus vulgaris L., and Lemna minor L. Approximately similar values in the range 0.2 to 0.4 millimoles grams fresh weight−1 hour−1 were obtained for both gases. In tissue subjected to vacuum infiltration, O2 evolution and 14CO2 fixation were barely measurable. It is considered that the elimination of photosynthetic gas exchange results from a decreased supply of CO2 to the chloroplasts. Chopping wheat laminae also leads to a reduction in photosynthetic gas exchange, slices 1 millimeter or less giving only 10 to 20% of the value for whole tissue. Respiration is unaffected by either treatment. Carbonic anhydrase did not improve photosynthetic gas exchange in infiltrated tissue. The use of sliced or vacuum-infiltrated leaf tissue in photosynthetic studies is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We studied plants of five species with hypostomatous leaves, and six with amphistomatous leaves, to determine the extent to which gaseous diffusion of CO2 among the mesophyll cells limits photosynthetic carbon assimilation. In helox (air with nitrogen replaced by helium), the diffusivities of CO2 and water vapor are 2.3 times higher than in air. For fixed estimated CO2 pressure at the evaporating surfaces of the leaf (pi), assimilation rates in helox ranged up to 27% higher than in air for the hypostomatous leaves, and up to 7% higher in the amphistomatous ones. Thus, intercellular diffusion must be considered as one of the processes limiting photosynthesis, especially for hypostomatous leaves. A corollary is that CO2 pressure should not be treated as uniform through the mesophyll in many leaves. To analyze our helox data, we had to reformulate the usual gas-exchange equation used to estimate CO2 pressure at the evaporating surfaces of the leaf; the new equation is applicable to any gas mixture for which the diffusivities of CO2 and H2O are known. Finally, we describe a diffusion-biochemistry model for CO2 assimilation that demonstrates the plausibility of our experimental results.  相似文献   

18.
Infection of bean leaves by Colletotrichum lundemuthianum causes vein necrosis and subsequent localized wilting of the blade. The effect of infection on photosynthesis was investigated by imaging leaf chlorophyll fluorescence as a means of mapping stomatal and metabolic inhibition of photosynthesis. During infection, CO2 assimilation (An), stomatal conductance to water vapour, and photosynthetic electron transport rate (Jt) decreased, whereas dark respiration increased. An decreased more than was expected from the reduction in green leaf area, showing that photosynthesis was inhibited in apparently healthy areas. Under subsaturating irradiance, images of Jt in air showed that photosynthesis decreased gradually, with this effect shifting from green to necrotic areas. Sudden increase in CO2 concentration to 0·74% in the atmosphere around the leaf only partially reversed this inhibition, showing that both stomatal and metabolic inhibition occurred. Under limiting irradiance, decreases in Jt and in maximal Jt during high CO2 exposure as leaf damage severity increased suggested that metabolic inhibition was mediated through an inhibition of Ribulose 1·5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration. Finally, the importance of our data in terms of assessing the loss of photosynthetic yield from visible symptoms – as is currently performed in epidemiology – is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The turnover of plant biomass largely determines the amount of energy flowing through an ecosystem and understanding the processes that regulate turnover has been of interest to ecologists for decades. Leaf life span theory has proven useful in explaining patterns of leaf turnover in relation to resource availability, but the predictions of this theory have not been tested for macroalgae. We measured blade life span, size, thickness, nitrogen content, pigment content, and maximum photosynthetic rate (P max) in the giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera) along a strong resource (light) gradient to test whether the predictions of leaf life span theory applied to this alga. We found that shorter blade life spans and larger blade areas were associated with increased light availability. In addition, nitrogen and P max decreased with blade age, and their decrease was greater in shorter lived blades. These observations are generally consistent with patterns observed for higher plants and the prevailing theory of leaf life span. By contrast, variation observed in pigments of giant kelp was inconsistent with that predicted by leaf life span theory, as blades growing in the most heavily shaded portion of the forest had the lowest chlorophyll content. This result may reflect the dual role of macroalgal blades in carbon fixation and nutrient absorption and the ability of giant kelp to modify blade physiology to optimize the acquisition of light and nutrients. Thus, the marine environment may place demands on resource acquisition and allocation that have not been previously considered with respect to leaf life span optimization.  相似文献   

20.
J. R. Evans  I. Jakobsen  E. Ögren 《Planta》1993,189(2):191-200
The shapes of photosynthetic light-response curves for leaves of Eucalyptus maculata (Hook) and E. pauciflora (Sieber ex Sprengel) were examined. Three different methods were used to measure photosynthesis: CO2 and H2O-vapour exchange, O2 evolution at a 5-kPa CO2 partial pressure, and chlorophyll fluorescence. The three methods were compared and gave good agreement when measured under equivalent conditions. However, O2 evolution was inhibited by high CO2 partial pressures. A non-rectangular hyperbolic curve has been used widely to describe photosynthetic light-response curves. It has three variables which define the maximum quantum yield (photosynthetic rate divided by absorbed irradiance at very low irradiances), the maximum capacity and the curvature (Θ). We found that Θ was affected by the CO2 partial pressure, declining to a minimum of about 0.6 as CO2 partial pressure increased to 100 Pa. Further increases in the CO2 partial pressure began to inhibit the rate of O2 evolution at 2000 μmol quanta · m?2·?1 and Θ increased back to 0.95 by 5 kPa CO2 partial pressure. At low irradiances, photosynthesis is limited by the rate of electron transport while at high irradiances, photosynthesis is frequently limited by the activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco). The dependence of Θ on CO2 partial pressure arises because the transition between limitations changes as a function of the CO2 partial pressure. The light-response curve is truncated by the transition to a Rubisco limitation and the lower the irradiance at the transition, the higher the value of Θ. There is a gradient in light absorption through the leaf which influences the photosynthetic capacity of different layers within the leaf. The gradient in photosynthetic capacity can be demonstrated by the fact that the shape of the light-response curve changes when the leaf is illuminated unilaterally onto either the adaxial or abaxial surface. We compared two Eucalyptus species which had either isolateral or dorsiventral leaf anatomy. Leaves were able to reverse completely the gradients in photosynthetic capacity following inversion of the leaves for a week, irrespective of their anatomy.  相似文献   

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