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1.
Knowledge of the energy saving night temperature (i.e. a relatively cool night temperature without affecting photosynthetic activity and physiology) and a better understanding of low night temperature effects on the photosynthetic physiology of Phalaenopsis would improve their production in terms of greenhouse temperature control and energy use. Therefore, Phalaenopsis‘Hercules’ was subjected to day temperatures of 27.5°C and night temperatures of 27.0°C, 24.2°C, 21.2°C, 18.3°C, 15.3°C or 12.3°C in a growth chamber. A new tool for the determination of the energy saving night temperature range was developed based on temperature response curves of leaf net CO2 exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, organic acid content and carbohydrate concentrations. The newly developed method was validated during a complete vegetative cultivation in a greenhouse environment with eight Phalaenopsis hybrids (i.e. ‘Boston’, ‘Bristol’, ‘Chalk Dust', ‘Fire Fly’, ‘Lennestadt’, ‘Liverpool’, ‘Precious’, ‘Vivaldi’) and day/night temperature set points of 28/28°C, 29/23°C and 29/17°C. Temperature response curves revealed an overall energy saving night temperature range for nocturnal CO2 uptake, carbohydrate metabolism, organic acid accumulation and photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry of 17.1°C to 19.9°C for Phalaenopsis‘Hercules’. At the lower end of this energy saving night temperature range, a high malate‐to‐citrate ratio switched towards a low ratio and this transition seemed to alleviate effects of night chilling induced photoinhibition. At night temperatures of 24°C or higher, the degradation of starch, glucose and fructose indicated an increased respiratory CO2 production. During the greenhouse validation experiment, the differences between the eight Phalaenopsis hybrids with regard to their response to the warm day/cool night temperature regimes were remarkably large. In general, the day/night temperature of 29/17°C led to a significantly lower biomass accumulation and less leaves which were in addition shorter, narrower and smaller in size as compared to the day/night temperature regimes of 28/28°C and 29/23°C. During week 25 of the cultivation period, plants matured and flower initiation steeply increased for all hybrids and in each day/night temperature regime. Before week 25, early spiking was only sufficiently suppressed in the 29/23°C and 29/17°C temperature regimes for three hybrids (‘Boston’, ‘Bristol’ and ‘Lennestadt’) but not in the other five hybrids. Although a considerable biochemical flexibility was demonstrated for Phalaenopsis‘Hercules’, inhibition of flowering after exposure to a combination of warm days and cool nights appeared to be largely hybrid dependent.  相似文献   

2.
Nowadays, a quest for efficient greenhouse heating strategies, and their related effects on the plant’s performance, exists. In this study, the effects of a combination of warm days and cool nights in autumn and spring on the photosynthetic activity and efficiency of Phalaenopsis were evaluated; the latter, being poorly characterised in plants with crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) and, to our knowledge, not reported before in Phalaenopsis. 24-h CO2 flux measurements and chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence analyses were performed in both seasons on Phalaenopsis ‘Hercules’ exposed to relatively constant temperature regimes, 25.5/24.0°C (autumn) and 30/27°C (spring) respectively, and distinctive warm day/cool night temperature regimes, 27/20°C (autumn) and 36/24°C (spring), respectively. Cumulated leaf net CO2 uptake of the distinctive warm day/cool night temperature regimes declined with 10–16% as compared to the more constant temperature regimes, while the efficiency of carbon fixation revealed no substantial differences in both seasons. Nevertheless, a distinctive warm day/cool night temperature regime seemed to induce photorespiration. Although photorespiration is expected not to occur in CAM, the suppression of the leaf net CO2 exchange during Phase II and Phase IV as well as the slightly lower efficiency of carbon fixation for the distinctive warm day/cool night temperature regimes confirms the involvement of photorespiration in CAM. A seasonal effect was reflected in the leaf net CO2 exchange rate with considerably higher rates in spring. In addition, sufficiently high levels of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) in spring led to an efficiency of carbon fixation of 1.06–1.27% which is about twice as high than in autumn. As a result, only in the case where a net energy reduction between the temperature regimes compensates for the reduction in net CO2 uptake, warm day/cool night temperature regimes may be recommended as a practical sustainable alternative.  相似文献   

3.
CAM requires a substantial investment of resources into storage carbohydrates to account for nocturnal CO2 uptake, thereby restricting carbohydrate partitioning to other metabolic activities, including dark respiration, growth and acclimation to abiotic stress. Flexible modulation of carbon flow to the different competing sinks under changing environmental conditions is considered a key determinant for the growth, productivity and ecological success of the CAM pathway. The aim of the present study was to examine how shifts in carbohydrate partitioning could assure maintenance of photosynthetic integrity and a positive carbon balance under conditions of increasing water deprivation in CAM species. Measurements of gas exchange, leaf water relations, malate, starch and soluble sugar (glucose, fructose and sucrose) contents were made in leaves of the CAM bromeliad Aechmea ‘Maya’ over a 6‐month period of drought and subsequently over a 2‐month period of recovery from drought. Results indicated that short‐term influences of water stress were minimized by elevating the level of respiratory recycling, and carbohydrate pools were maintained at the expense of export for growth while providing a comparable nocturnal carbon gain to that in well‐watered control plants. Longer term drought resulted in a disproportionate depletion of key carbohydrate reserves. Sucrose, which was of minor importance for providing substrate for the dark reactions under well‐watered conditions, became the major source of carbohydrate for nocturnal carboxylation as drought progressed. Flexibility in terms of the major carbohydrate source used to sustain dark CO2 uptake is therefore considered a crucial factor in meeting the carbon and energy demands under limiting environmental conditions. Recovery from CAM‐idling was found to be dependent on the restoration of the starch pool, which was used predominantly for provision of substrate for nocturnal carboxylation, while net carbon export was limited. The conservation of starch for the nocturnal reactions might be adaptive with regard to responding efficiently to a return of water stress.  相似文献   

4.
M. Kluge  Ch. Böhlke  O. Queiroz 《Planta》1981,152(1):87-92
In the crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant Kalanchoë daigremontiana, the internal CO2 concentrations were measured throughout CAM cycles by gas chromatography. Under normal dark-light cycles, the internal CO2 concentration was near that of the ambient air and increased up to 0.5% during the phase of maximum malate decarboxylation. A sharp increase in internal CO2 concentration occurring after the first 12 h of the cycle was exhibited by the plants both when there was a normal day-night cycle and when the night was replaced by illumination, and also when the light period was replaced by darkness. Thus, the increase in internal CO2 in the morning does not appear to be primarily determined by a light-on signal or by alterations of temperature rather than by inherent factors of the leaves. This view is supported further by a steep increase in 14CO2 production from labeted malate occurring during extended darkness at a time when the light period would normally begin. The results are discussed in particular in relation to of how CAM can control stomata movement.Abbreviation CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism  相似文献   

5.
Photosynthetic flexibility and water use efficiency of Kalanchoë petitiana A. Rich., a facultative CAM plant endemic to the highlands of Ethiopia, were investigated to determine the physiological determinants for the ecological success of the plant. Both field measurements of δ13C and greenhouse gas exchange studies showed a shift from C3 photosynthesis to CAM as leaves aged or at the onset of water stress. Recycling of CO2 was observed in developing leaves without concomitant net CO2 uptake. Accumulation of malate was positively correlated with increased cell sap osmolality and improved daily water use efficiency. The importance of flexibility in carbon uptake pathway and of recycling CO2 for the ecological success of the plant is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Features of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) were studied in a variety of different succulents in response to climatic conditions between March 1977 and October 1983 in the southern Namib desert (Richtersveld). A screening in 1977 and 1978 revealed that nearly all investigated succulents performed a CAM, but overnight accumulation of malate declined gradually with decreasing soil water potential, tissue osmotic potential, and leaf water content. This was further substantiated by an extended period of insufficient rainfall in 1979 and 1980 which damaged the evergreen CAM succulents between 80 and 100%. In most of the species still living, neither CO2-gas exchange nor diurnal acid fluctuation, indicative of CAM, could be detected unless an abundant rainfall restored both CAM features. Plants persisted in a stage of latent life.Water supply is one necessary prerequisite for CAM in the Richtersveld. But even well-watered plants with CAM were sensitive to short-term water stress caused by high water-vapour partialpressure deficit (VPD) in the night, which reduced or prevented CO2 uptake and resulted in a linear relation between overnight accumulated malate and VPD. The results do not support the opinion that, for the Namib succulents, CAM is an adaptive mechanism to water stress since long-term and short-term water stress stopped nocturnal malate synthesis, but instead lead to the conclusion that nocuturnal CO2 fixation is only performed when the water status of the plant can be improved simultaneously.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - VPD water vapour pressure deficit Dedicated to Professor H. Ziegler on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

7.
The responses of CO2 exchange and overnight malate accumulation of leaf and stem succulent CAM-plants to water stress and the particular climatic conditiens of fog and föhn in the southern Namib desert have been investigated. In most of the investigated CAM plants a long term water stress gradually attenuated any uptake of external CO2 and led to CO2 release throughout day and night. No CAM-idling was observed. Rainfall or irrigation immediately restored daytime CO2 uptake while the recovery of the noctural CO2 uptake was delayed. Dawn peak of photosynthesis was only found in well watered plants but was markedly reduced by the short term water stress of a föhn-storm. Morning fog with its higher diffuse light intensity compared with clear days increased photosynthetic CO2 uptake considerably. Even in well watered plants noctural CO2 uptake and malate accumulation were strongly affected by föhn indicating that the water vapour pressure deficit during the night determines the degree of acidification.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract The regulation of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) under controlled environmental conditions has been investigated for two tropical epiphytes, relating plant water and carbon balance to growth form and habitat preference under natural conditions. Aechmea fendleri is restricted to wet, upper montane regions of Trinidad, while A. nudicaulis has a wider distribution extending into more arid regions of the island. Morphological characteristics of these plants are related to habitat preference in terms of leaf succulence (0.44 and 0.94 kg m?2 for the two species respectively) and a distinct layer of water storage parenchyma in A. nudicaulis In contrast, the thinner leaves of A. fendleri contain little water-storage parenchyma and less chlorenchyma per unit area, but the plants have a more open leaf rosette. The two species differ in expression of CAM, since the proportion of respiratory CO2 recycled as part of CAM had been found to be much lower in A. fendleri This study compared the efficiency of water use and role of respiratory CO2 recycling under two PAR regimes (300 and 120 μnol m?2 s?1) and three night temperatures (12, 18 and 25 °C). Dark CO2 uptake rates for both species were comparable to plants in the field (maximum of 2.3 ± 0.2 μmol m?2s?1± SD, n= 3). Total net CO2 uptake at night increased on leaf area basis with temperature for both species under higher PAR, although under the low PAR regime CO2 uptake was maximal at 18 °C. Water-use efficiency (WUE) increased at 18 °C and 25 °C during dark CO2 uptake (Phase I) and also during late afternoon photosynthesis (Phase IV) in both species. For A. fendleri, dawn to dusk changes in titrable acidity (ΔH +) were similar under high and low PAR, although ΔH+ was correlated to night temperature and PAR in A. nudicaulis. The proportion of ΔH+ derived from respiratory CO2 also varied with experimental conditions. Thus percentage recycling was lower in A. fendleri under high PAR (0–10%), but was only reduced at 18 °C under low PAR. Recycling by A. nudicaulis ranged from 32–42% under high PAR, but was also reduced to 6% under low PAR at 18 °C; at 12 °C and 25 °C, recycling was 37% and 52% respectively. Previous studies have suggested a relationship between the proportion of recycling and degree of water stress. This study indicated that CAM as a CO2 concentrating mechanism regulates both water-use efficiency and plant carbon balance in these epiphytes, in response to PAR and night temperature. However, the precise relationship between respiratory processes and the balance between external and internal sources of CO2 is as yet unresolved.  相似文献   

9.
The responses of CO2 exchange and overnight malate accumulation of leaf and stem succulent CAM-plants to water stress and the particular climatic conditions of fog and föhn in the southern Namib desert have been investigated. In most of the investigated CAM plants a long term water stress gradually attenuated any uptake of external CO2 and led to CO2 release throughout day and night. No CAM-idling was observed. Rainfall or irrigation immediately restored daytime CO2 uptake while the recovery of the nocturnal CO2 uptake was delayed. Dawn peak of photosynthesis was only found in well watered plants but was markedly reduced by the short term water stress of a föhn-storm. Morning fog with its higher diffuse light intensity compared with clear days increased photosynthetic CO2 uptake considerably. Even in well watered plants nocturnal CO2 uptake and malate accumulation were strongly affected by föhn indicating that the water vapour pressure deficit during the night determines the degree of acidification.  相似文献   

10.
Summary CO2-exchange, diurnal changes in malate- and ion concentrations of the halophytes Carpobrotus edulis, Crithmum maritimum, Mesembryanthemum nodiflorum, Salicornia fruticosa, Suaeda maritima, and Trifolium fragiferum were investigated after culture at different NaCl concentrations. In Carp. edulis and Mes. nodiflorum the diurnal rhythm of CO2-exchange is in accordance with that of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), in Sal. fruticosa, Crithm. maritimum, Suaeda maritima, and Trif. fragiferum with that of Benson-Calvin metabolism (C3). Malate concentration and CO2 uptake in the sap latter group are not influenced. On the other hand, Carp. edulis and Mes. nodiflorum show an accumulation of malate during the night, which can be interpreted as a further indication of CAM.The two species most resistant to NaCl, Carp. edulis and Sal. fruticosa, greatly differ very much in their NaCl content. NaCl concentration in Salicornia is four times higher than in Carpobrotus.The different metabolic properties studied might be of ecological importance for the plants in their natural habitats. The effect of NaCl on metabolic processes is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Tillandsia usneoides, in the common sense a non-succulent plant, exhibits CO2 exchange characterized by net CO2 dark fixation during the night and depression of CO2 exchange during the day. Malate has been demonstrated to accumulate during CO2 dark fixation and to be converted to carbohydrates in light. Thus, T. usneoides exhibits CAM like typical succulents.Net CO2 uptake during the day is increased with net CO2 output being suppressed in duration of time and extent when light intensity increases. Furthermore, a slight increase in CO2 fixation during the following night can be observed if the plants were treated with high light intensity during the previous day.Curves of CO2 exchange typical for CAM are obtained if T. usneoides is kept at 15°C and 20°C. Lower temperature tend to increase CO2 uptake during the day and to inhibit CO2 dark fixation. Temperatures higher than 20°C favour loss of CO2 by respiration, which becomes apparent during the whole day and night at 30°C and higher temperatures. Thus, T. usneoides gains carbon only at temperatures well below 25°C.Net CO2 uptake during the day occurs only in moist plant material and is inhibited in plants cept under water stress conditions. However, CO2 uptake during the night is clearly favoured if the plants dry out. Therefore dry plants gain more carbon than moist ones.Curves of CO2 exchange typical for CAM were also obtained with 13 other species of the genus Tillandsia.The exhibition of CAM by the non-succulent T. usneoides calls for a new definition of the term succulence if it is to remain useful in characterizing this metabolic pathway. Because CO2-fixing cells of T. usneoides possess relatively large vacuoles and are relatively poor in chloroplasts, they resembles the assimilatory cells of typical CAM-exhibiting succulents. Therefore, if succulence only means the capacity of big vacuoles to store malate, the assimilatory cells in T. usneoides are succulent. It seems to be useful to investigate parameters which would allow a definition of the term succulence on the level of the cell rather than on the level of the whole plant or plant organs.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Gas exchange patterns and nocturnal acid accumulation were examined in four species of Clusia under simulated field conditions in the laboratory. Clusia alata and C. major had midday stomatal closure, substantial net CO2 exchange ( ) during the night, and the highest water use efficiency (WUE). C. venosa showed a pattern similar to a C3 plant, with nighttime stomatal closure, while C. minor maintained positive continuously throughout a 24-h period. However, large changes in titratable acidity, which closely matched changes in citrate and malate levels, indicated that Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is active in all four species. C. venosa showed dawn-dusk oscillations in titratable acidity that were higher than the values reported for other C3-CAM intermediates, while the nighttime acid accumulation of 998 mol m–3 observed in C. major is unsurpassed by any other CAM plant. Moreover, the dawn-dusk changes in citrate levels of over 65 mol m–3 in C. alata and C. minor, and over 120 mol m–3 in C. major, are 3–6 times higher than values reported for other CAM plants. Although these oscillations in citrate levels were quite large, and the nighttime dark respiration rates were high, the O2 budget analysis suggestes that only part of the reducing power generated by the synthesis of citric acid enters the respiratory chain. Dawn-dusk changes in malate levels were just over 50 mol m–3 for C. venosa but over 300 mol m–3 for C. major. Between 28% (C. major) and 89% (C. venosa) of the malate accumulated during the night was derived from recycled respiratory CO2. These daily changes in malate and citrate levels also contributed significantly to changes in leaf sap osmolality. This variability in CO2 uptake patterns, the recycling of nighttime respiratory CO2, and the high WUE may have contributed to the successful invasion of Clusia into a wide range of habitats in the tropics.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate the possible induction of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) by drought in Talinum paniculatum ([Jacq.] Gaertn.), a deciduous herb with succulent leaves and lignified stems, nocturnal acid accumulation and CO2-exchange were studied in watered and droughted greenhouse-grown plants. Watered plants had a typical C3 pattern of CO2-exchange. When plants were subjected to drought, nocturnal acid accumulation increased significantly from 0.9 to 13.4 μmol H+ cm?2 after 21 days. Water deficit provoked a rapid reduction of daytime CO2 assimilation of as much as 92% and a slower increase in night-time fixation. A maximum of 24% of the diel carbon gain was contributed by dark fixation in droughted plants. After 34 days of drought, only CO2 compensation and a small accumulation of acid (idling) was detected during the night. Relative recycling of respiratory CO2 was approximately 100% for most of the water deficit treatment, the amount of CO2 recycled showing a high positive correlation with nocturnal acid accumulation. A low rate of nocturnal loss of CO2 in watered plants did not explain the amount recycled nightly in droughted plants, implying that respiration increased with drought. Leaf lamina area was reduced by 49% during drought due to rolling. Leaf biomass remained unchanged during the water-deficit treatment. Neither apparent quantum yield nor light-saturated photosynthetic rate differed significantly between control and 14-day water-stressed plants rewatered for 20 h. Chlorophyll content did not change with drought. These results confirm that CAM is induced by drought in T. paniculatum; the carbon acquired through this pathway only contributes to maintain, but not to increase, leaf biomass; also, CAM is responsible for a high recycling of respiratory CO2 during the night. Recycling through CAM, plus the reduction of exposed leaf area during drought, may help explain the maintenance of chlorophyll, quantum yield and saturated photosynthetic rates in water-stressed plants of T. paniculatum.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of low‐temperature stress, cold acclimation and growth at high irradiance in a spring (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Katepwa) and a winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Monopol) were examined in leaves and crowns with respect to the sucrose utilisation and carbon allocation. Light‐saturated and carbon dioxide (CO2)‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation were decreased by 50% in cold‐stressed spring and winter wheat cultivars. Cold‐ or high light‐acclimated Katepwa spring wheat maintained light‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation comparable to those of control spring wheat. In contrast, cold‐ or high light‐acclimated winter wheat maintained higher light and CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation than non‐acclimated controls. In leaves, during either cold stress, cold acclimation or acclimation to high irradiance, the sucrose/starch ratio increased by 5‐ to 10‐fold and neutral invertase activity increased by 2‐ to 2.5‐fold in both the spring and the winter wheat. In contrast, Monopol winter wheat, but not Katepwa spring wheat, exhibited a 3‐fold increase in leaf sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activity, a 4‐fold increase in sucrose:sucrose fructosyl transferase activity and a 6.6‐fold increase in acid invertase upon cold acclimation. Although leaves of cold‐stressed and high light‐grown spring and winter wheat showed 2.3‐ to 7‐fold higher sucrose levels than controls, these plants exhibited a limited capacity to adjust either sucrose phosphate synthase or sucrose synthase activity (SS[s]). In addition, the acclimation to high light resulted in a 23–31% lower starch abundance and no changes at the level of fructan accumulation in leaves of either winter or spring wheat when compared with controls. However, high light‐acclimated winter wheat exhibited a 1.8‐fold higher neutral invertase activity and high light‐acclimated spring wheat exhibited an induction of SS(d) activity when compared with controls. Crowns of Monopol showed higher fructan accumulation than Katepwa upon cold and high light acclimation. We suggest that the differential adjustment of CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation upon cold acclimation in Monopol winter wheat, as compared with Katepwa spring wheat, is associated with the increased capacity of Monopol for sucrose utilisation through the biosynthesis of fructans in the leaves and subsequent export to the crowns. In contrast, the differential adjustment of CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation upon high light acclimation of Monopol appears to be associated with both increased fructan and starch accumulation in the crowns.  相似文献   

15.
Net CO2 dark fixation of Kalanchoë daigremontiana varies with night temperature. We found an optimum of fixation at about 15° C; with increasing night temperature fixation decreased. We studied the temperature dependence of the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-carboxylase, the key enzyme for CO2 dark fixation. We varied the pH, the substrate concentration (PEP), and the L-malate and glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) concentration in the assay. Generally, lowering the pH and reducing the amount of substrate resulted in an increase in activation by G-6-P and in an increase in malate inhibition of the enzyme. Furthermore, malate inhibition and G-6-P activation increased with increasing temperature. Activity measurements between 10° C and 45°C at a given concentration of the effectors revealed that the temperature optimum and maximum activities at that optimum varied with the effector applied. Under the influence of 5 mol m-3 L-malate the temperature optimum and maximum activity dropped drastically, especially when the substrate level was low (at 0.5 mol m-3 PEP from 32° C to 20° C). G-6-P raised the temperature optimum and maximum activity when the substrate level was low. If both malate and G-6-P were present, intermediate values were measured. We suggest that changes in metabolite levels in K. daigremontiana leaves can alter the temperature features of PEP-carboxylase so that the observed in vivo CO2 dark fixation can be explained on the basis of PEP-carboxylase activity.Abbreviations PEP-c phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate  相似文献   

16.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31; PEPCase) from Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi leaves has previously been shown to exist in two forms in vivo. During the night the enzyme is phosphorylated and relatively insensitive to feedback inhibition by malate whereas during the day the enzyme is dephosphorylated and more sensitive to inhibition by malate. These properties of PEPCase have now been investigated in leaves maintained under constant conditions of temperature and lighting. When leaves were maintained in continuous darkness and CO2-free air at 15°C, PEPCase exhibited a persistent circadian rhythm of interconversion between the two forms. There was a good correlation between periods during which the leaves were fixing respiratory CO2 and periods during which PEPCase was in the form normally observed at night. When leaves were maintained in continuous light and normal air at 15°C, starting at the end of a night or the end of a day, a circadian rhythm of net uptake of CO2 was observed. Only when these constant conditions were applied at the end of a day was a circadian rhythm of interconversions between the two forms of PEPCase observed and the rhythms of enzyme interconversion and CO2 uptake did not correlate in phase or period.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - FW fresh weight - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - RuBPCase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase To whom correspondence should be addressed.  相似文献   

17.
To determine possible physiological responses to salinity, seedlings of Cereus validus Haworth, a cactus from Salinas Grandes, Argentina, were treated with up to 600 millimolar NaCl for up to 16 days when they were about 9 months old and 100 millimeters tall. Salt stress decreased stem biomass, e.g. it was 19.7 grams for controls and 11.4 grams for plants treated with 400 millimolar NaCl for 14 days. Nocturnal CO2 uptake in these obligate Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants was inhibited 67% upon treatment with 400 millimolar NaCl for 14 days (controls, 181 millimoles CO2 per square meter), while nocturnal accumulation of malate was inhibited 49% (controls, 230 millimoles malate per square meter). The larger accumulation of malate as compared to uptake of atmospheric CO2 suggests that internal CO2 recycling occurred during the dark period. Such recycling was lower in the controls (~20%) than in the NaCl-treated plants (~50%). The nocturnal increase in malate and titratable acidity depended on the total daily photosynthetically active radiation available; measurements suggest a quantum requirment of 26 photons per malate. As NaCl in the medium was increased to 600 millimolar in daily increments of 50 millimolar, Na and Cl concentrations in the roots increased from about 7 to 100 millimolar, but K concentration in the cell sap remained near 26 millimolar. Concomitantly, concentrations of Na and Cl in the shoots increased from 8 to 17 millimolar and from 1 to 7 millimolar, respectively, while the K concentration increased about 16 to 60 millimolar. In plants maintained for 14 days at 500 millimolar NaCl, the root levels of Na and Cl increased to 260 millimolar, the shoot levels were about 60 millimolar, and the stem bases began to become necrotic. Such Na retention in the roots together with the special possibilities of carbon reutilization given by CAM are apparently survival mechanisms for the temporarily saline conditions experienced in its natural habitat.  相似文献   

18.
The studies described in the paper were conducted with tissue slices of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants floating in isotonic buffer. In a first series of experiments, temperature effects on the efflux of [14C]malate and14CO2 were studied. An increase of temperature increased the efflux from the tissue in a non-linear manner. The efflux was markedly influenced also by the temperatures applied during the pretreatment. The rates of label export in response to the temperature and the relative contributions of14CO2 and [14C]malate to the label export were different in the two studied CAM plants (Kalanchoë daigremontiana, Sempervivum montanum). In further experiments, temperature response of the labelling patterns produced by14CO2 fixation and light and darkness were studied. In tissue which had accumulated malate (acidified state) an increase of temperature decreased the rates of dark CO2 fixation whilst the rates of CO2 fixation in light remained largely unaffected. An increase of temperature shifted the labelling patterns from a C4-type (malate being the mainly labelled compound) into a C3-type (label in carbohydrates). No such shift in the labelling patterns could be observed in the tissue which had depleted the previously stored malate (deacidified state). The results indicate that in the acidified tissue the increase of temperature increases the efflux of malate from the vacuole by changing the properties of the tonoplast. It is assumed that the increased export of malic acid lowers the in-vivo activity of phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase by feedback inhibition.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - FW fresh weight - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase Dedicated to Professor O.L. Lange, Würzburg, on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

19.
Abstract The paper reports the results of the comprehensive study of crassulacean acid metabolism in two epiphytic tropical ferns, Drymoglossum piloselloides and Pyrrosia longifolia. The plants were investigated under different light, temperature and water status. It was found that both species are obligate CAM plants. The diurnal acidity rhythm is due to the fluctuation in malic acid concentration, which accounts for the change in titratable acidity. Besides malic acid, shikimate and oxalate are found to be present, but not contributing to the CAM acid rhythm. The diurnal rhythm of malic acid content results in a corresponding rhythm in leaf water relations. Both ΦΦ and Φtotal, were lowest at the end of the night, i.e. when the level of malic acid was highest. The effects of temperature on CO2 exchange were inverse to those observed in other CAM plants. In both ferns studied, dark CO2 fixation increased when the night temperature was increased. Increase in day temperature reduced CO2 uptake during phase IV and during the following night. The observed responses of the ferns to temperature changes suggest that the in situ environmental conditions are optimal for their CAM performance. In weak light, the plants showed net CO2 output during the midday deacidification period. Increases in light intensity reduced such CO2 output. Under drought conditions, the CO2 exchange in the ferns was reduced to zero within 5–6 d, indicating that the ferns studied are more susceptible to water deficiency than other CAM plants. This could be due to a higher cuticular conductance for water. The results are discussed, in particular, in relation to CAM performance of epiphytes growing in the wet tropics.  相似文献   

20.
Plants of the crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) species Plectranthus marrubioides (Lamiaceae) were subjected to short- and long-term changes in air humidity in controlled-environment experiments. Stomata of well-watered individuals of this all-cell leaf-succulent taxon responded directly, quickly and reversibly to variations of the water vapour gradient between leaf and air (Δw). Mean night-time leaf conductance to water vapour decreased curvilinearly with increasing Δw but linearly with lowered relative air humidity. Stomatal response was generally independent of the prevailing temperature and was not linked to CO2 uptake rates. Therefore, net night-time carbon gain, nocturnal malic acid accumulation and, thus, relative carbon recycling were not influenced by changes in air humidity in the temperature range tested. Mean nocturnal molar water use efficiency, however, decreased with decreasing air humidity because of the increased transpirational water loss. If watering was repeatedly withheld for several days during the experiments, employing a temperature regime of 35/30°C day and night, stomatal conductance became low enough to inhibit CO2 uptake, but only at the highest Δw. The results suggest that drought stress was necessary to increase responsiveness of plants to the point where CAM was also inhibited by decreases in air humidity.  相似文献   

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