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1.
Stratospheric ozone depletion is most pronounced at high latitudes, and the concurring increased UV-B radiation might adversely affect plants from polar areas. However, vascular plants may protect themselves against UV-B radiation by UV-absorbing compounds located in the epidermis. In this 3-year study, epidermal UV-B (max 314 nm) and UV-A (max 366 nm) screening was assessed using a fluorescence method in 12 vascular species growing in their natural environment at Svalbard. The potential for acclimation to increased radiation was studied with artificially increased UV-B, simulating 11% ozone depletion. Open-top chambers simulated an increase in temperature of 2–3°C in addition to the UV-B manipulation. Adaxial epidermal UV-B transmittance varied between 1.6 and 11.4%. Artificially increased UV-B radiation and temperature did not consistently influence the epidermal UV-B transmittance in any of the measured species, suggesting that they may not have the potential to increase their epidermal screening, or that the screening is already high enough at the applied UV-B level. We propose that environmental factors other than UV-B radiation may influence epidermal UV-B screening.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract Mechanisms of plant protection and acclimation to potentially damaging solar ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280–320 nm) radiation incident on the Earth's surface were examined in Oenothera stricta. Attenuation of this radiation in the upper leaf epidermis reduces the penetration of UV-B radiation to the mesophyll where damage to physiologically sensitive targets can occur. The epidermis is a highly selective radiation filter that can attenuate up to 95% of the incident UV-B radiation and yet transmit between 70% and 80% of the visible radiation. Exposure to UV-B radiation significantly reduced the degree of epidermal UV-B transmittance by as much as 33%. No significant reduction in epidermal transmittance of visible radiation was observed as a result of UV-B exposure. The plasticity in epidermal UV-B transmittance results from production of flavonoid and related phenolic compounds in the tissue. Absorbance of UV-B radiation in llavonoid extract solutions from epidermal and mesophyll tissues significantly increased by as much as 100% and 35%, respectively, after exposure to UV-B radiation. Photosynthetic rates of leaves exposed to UV-B radiation were not significantly reduced at dose rates representative of the radiation flux found in the habitat of this species, but significant photosynthetic depression was observed at dose rates that exceed the field UV-B flux. The phenotypic plasticity in epidermal UV-B transmittance resulting in decreased penetration of damaging UV-B radiation to the mesophyll may reduce the rate of damage to a level where repair mechanisms can keep pace with reduced injury.  相似文献   

3.
Leaves of Vicia faba were collected from the field and the greenhouse and transmittance of epidermal peels from adaxial and abaxial sides was determined in the wavelength range from 250 to 800 nm using a spectrophotometer equipped for the measurement of turbid samples. From the same leaves, epidermal transmittance was estimated by a recently developed fluorometric method. Both methods gave highly correlated results with a slope of the regression line between both methods close to 1 and an intercept close to 0. Transmittances at around 310 nm as low as 3% were detected in the adaxial epidermis of field-grown leaves, while transmittance could be as high as 70% in the abaxial epidermis of greenhouse-grown leaves. There was a strong correlation between UV-A (ca. 366 nm) and UV-B (ca. 310 nm) transmittance detected by both methods which could be explained by the pigment composition in methanolic extracts where flavonols accounted for 90% of the absorption at 310 nm in the extract, while hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives which absorb only at the shorter wavelength constituted about 5%. It is concluded that the fluorescence method which allows rapid measurements on intact leaves can provide a quantitative estimate of epidermal transmittance for UV-B (280–320 nm) and UV-A (320–400 nm) radiation.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The unprecedented rate of depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer will likely lead to appreciable increases in the amount of ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 280–320 nm) reaching the earth's surface. In plants, photosynthetic reactions and nucleic acids in the mesophyll of leaves are deleteriously affected by UV-B. We used a fiber-optic microprobe to make direct measurements of the amount of UV-B reaching these potential targets in the mesophyll of intact foliage. A comparison of foliage from a diverse group of Rocky Mountain plants enabled us to assess whether the foliage of some plant life forms appeared more effective at screening UV-B radiation. The leaf epidermis of herbaceous dicots was particularly ineffective at attenuating UV-B; epidermal transmittance ranged from 18–41% and UV-B reached 40–145 m into the mesophyll or photosynthetic tissue. In contrast to herbaceous dicots, the epidermis of 1-year old conifer needles attenuated essentially all incident UV-B and virtually none of this radiation reached the mesophyll. Although the epidermal layer was appreciably thinner in older needles (7 y) at high elevations (Krumholtz), essentially all incident UV-B was attenuated by the epidermis in these needles. The same epidermal screening effectiveness was observed after removal of epicuticular waxes with chloroform. Leaves of woody dicots and grasses appeared intermediate between herbaceous dicots and conifers in their UV-B screening abilities with 3–12% of the incident UV-B reaching the mesophyll. These large differences in UV-B screening effectiveness suggest that certain plant life forms may be more predisposed than others to meet the challenge of higher UV-B levels resulting from stratospheric ozone depletion.  相似文献   

5.
T. A. Day 《Oecologia》1993,95(4):542-550
The ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 300 nm) screening effectiveness of foliage of a diverse group of plants was examined by measuring epidermal transmittance and depth of penetration of UV-B with a fiberoptic microprobe. In addition, the concentration of UV-B-absorbing compounds and various anatomical characteristics were measured to assess whether they were useful predictors of UV-B screening. Sun foliage of naturally growing individuals of seven species were sampled in each of six life forms comprising two evergreen groups (gymnosperms and angiosperms) and four deciduous angiosperm groups (trees, shrubs and vines, herbaceous dicotyledons, and grasses). There was significant life-form variation in epidermal transmittance and depth of penetration of UV-B, concentration of UV-B-absorbing compounds (leaf-area basis), epidermal (including cuticle and hypodermis) thickness, and specific leaf area. Values of these parameters tended to be related to leaf longevity, with the most notable differences apparent between evergreen and deciduous species. The mean epidermal transmittance and depth of penetration of UV-B in foliage averaged 4% and 32 m in evergreens, compared to 28% and 75 m in deciduous species. These values are conservative estimates since the microprobe was oriented in foliage such that much of the side- and backscattered UV-B was ignored. The strongest predictors of epidermal transmittance and depth of penetration were epidermal thickness and the concentration of absorbing compounds, which averaged 32 m and 1.50 A cm–2 in evergreens, but only 19 m and 0.99 A cm–2 in deciduous foliage. However, the variation found in these relationships implies that additional factors warrant consideration in assessing UV-B-screening effectiveness. The relatively ineffective screening of UV-B by foliage of many deciduous plants suggests they may be more responsive to enhanced UV-B than evergreen species.  相似文献   

6.
In some plants, particularly herbaceous species, a considerable proportion of incident ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 280-320 nm) penetrates into the leaf mesophyll where it is potentially damaging to nucleic acids and the photosyn-thetic machinery. We used optical techniques to look at the spatial variation in UV-B penetration through the epidermis of foliage of two herbaceous species (Chenopodium album and Smilacina stellata)and a conifer (Picea pun-gens). Measurements of UV-B penetration in intact foliage with a fibre-optic microprobe revealed that 300 nm radiation reached 161±36μm (mean±SD) into leaves of C. album, 154±40μm in S. stellata and 17±2μm in P. pungens, with epidermal transmittance being 39±14%, 55±19% and 0%, respectively. A thin polymer film was developed which fluoresced blue when irradiated by UV-B. Fresh epidermal leaf peels were placed over the film and irradiated with UV-B, and microscopic examination of the film from below allowed us to determine the spatial pattern of UV-B penetration through the epidermis. In herbaceous species, film fluorescence below cell walls, but not epidermal and guard cell protoplasts indicated that UV-B transmittance was much greater through anticlinal cell wall regions than protoplasts. Ultraviolet-B transmittance through large areas of epidermal cells could be induced by plasmolysis. Epidermal transmittance was also relatively high through stomal pores (and what appear to be nuclei in Smilacina), but relatively low through stomatal guard cells. Results from the fluorescing film technique were substantiated by direct measurements of UV-B transmittance through epidermal peels with a fibre-optic microprobe run paradermally along the bottom or inner side of irradiated peels. In Smilacina, we estimate that UV-B epidermal transmittance was up to 90% through anticlinal cell wall regions, but <10% through protoplast areas. In contrast to herbaceous species, we did not detect any UV-B transmittance through the epidermis of P. pungens with either the fluorescing film or the fibre-optic microprobe technique. The epidermis appears to be a much more spatially uniform UV-B filter in conifers than in these herbaceous species.  相似文献   

7.
The visual pigments and oil droplets in the retina of the diurnal gecko Gonatodes albogularis were examined microspectrophotometrically, and the spectral sensitivity under various adapting conditions was recorded using electrophysiological responses. Three classes of visual pigments were identified, with max at about 542, 475, and 362 nm. Spectral sensitivity functions revealed a broad range of sensitivity, with a peak at approximately 530–540 nm. The cornea and oil droplets were found to be transparent across a range from 350–700 nm, but the lens absorbed short wavelength light below 450 nm. Despite the filtering effect of the lens, a secondary peak in spectral sensitivity to ultraviolet wavelengths was found. These results suggest that G. albogularis does possess the visual mechanisms for discrimination of the color pattern of conspecifics based on either hue or brightness. These findings are discussed in terms of the variation in coloration and social behavior of Gonatodes.Abbreviations ERG electroretinogram - MSP microspectrophotometry - UV ultraviolet - max wavelength of maximum absorbance  相似文献   

8.
Spectral reflectance and transmittance of leaves to ultraviolet irradiation were determined under laboratory conditions for seven species of hardwood trees, namely red oak (Quercus rubra, L), black oak (Q. velutina, Lamarch), white oak (Q. alba, L.), sugar maple (Acer saccharum), Norway maple (A. plantanoides), hickory (Carya tomemtosa), sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua), and black oak litter. The experimental system consisted of a solar simulator, an integrating sphere, and a spectroradiometer. Experiments were repeated three to five times for both adaxial and abaxial surfaces of fresh leaves chosen at randomly. The spectral distributions and simple averages of the radiative properties in the wavelength ranges of ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280–320 nm) and ultraviolet-A (UV-A, 320–400 nm) were determined. The spectral distributions of reflectance were similar between adaxial and abaxial surfaces, although the magnitude varied among tree species. Leaf reflectance was very low for the ultraviolet spectrum in general and varied among species and between adaxial and abaxial surfaces. It was generally higher over the UV-A waveband compared to UV-B, and higher on the abaxial than adaxial surface. The broadband reflectance in the UV-A range (over all species) was 5.0 and 3.9% for abaxial and adaxial surface, respectively, compared to 3.5 and 2.8% in UV-B. The transmittance through leaves was extremely small in the UV-B (<0.1%) and nearly zero in the UV-A spectral range. Consequently, the absorptance of ultraviolet radiation by leaves, as determined from the measured reflectance and transmittance, was quite high, being more than 90% for all the combinations of species and wavebands examined. The reported results are useful for studies requiring spectral radiative properties of the examined leaves with respect to ultraviolet irradiation.  相似文献   

9.
Attenuation of UV radiation by plant cuticles from woody species   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Transmittance spectra of isolated plant cuticles were measured in the wavelength range from 270 to 600 nm. The cuticles were enzymatically isolated from the leaves of 27 species (26 evergreen or deciduous woody, one succulent herbaceous) and from four species of fruits. With the exception of subtropical and tropical species all plants were cultivated in the field. The cuticles of the species studied strongly attenuated ultraviolet (UV) radiation at wavelengths < 400 nm while they were practically translucent in the visible range. Relatively broad transmittance minima occurred at wavelengths from 280 to 320 nm (UV-B). Spectral transmittances at 300 nm ranged from 0.004 (Ilex aquifolium) to 0.50 (Prunus avium) for leaf cuticles and from 0.00023 (Cydonia oblonga) to 0.005 (Mains domestica) for fruit cuticles. The constitutive UV protection by cuticular pigments may be supplemented, to varying degrees, by pigments located in the epidermal cell wall and protoplast. Thus, it is concluded that only a small fraction of incident UV-B radiation may actually reach the sensitive tissues of the leaves of non-herbaceous species and of fruits.  相似文献   

10.
Autofluorescent chromatophores were detected in 17 out of 71 zooxanthellate coral species studied. Chromatophores are localized either in the oral gastrodermic (endoderm) or oral epidermis (ectoderm). The pigment granules within the chromatophores (0.5–1.0 m in diameter) show a brilliant light-blue/turquoise autofluorescence (emission between 430 and 500 nm) after excitation with light of 365–410 nm. All species where the autofluorescent gastrodermal chromatophores form a compact layer, embedding the zooxanthellae, belong to the family Agariciidae. In contrast, some species of the Faviidae (2), Pectiniidae (1) and Mussidae (1) were found to have distinct, autofluorescent chromatophores in the oral epidermis. Autofluorescent pigments of the host may enhance photosynthesis of the symbionts as in Leptoseris fragilis. Short wavelength irradiance, less suitable for photosynthesis, is transformed by host pigments into longer wavelengths which are photosynthetically more effective. Thus, host species possessing autofluorescent chromatophores might have selective advantage over non-fluorescent species, and have the potential to survive in light-limited habitats. Furthermore, the daily period of photosynthesis is extended, thus increasing the energy supply and enhancing the deposition of skeletal carbonate. The absence or presence of chromatophores may have value in taxonomy and could putatively be of plalaeontological and palaeoecological interest.  相似文献   

11.
Tropical reef fishes are exposed to high levels of damaging ultraviolet radiation. Here we report the widespread distribution of both UVA- and UVB-absorbing compounds in the epithelial mucus of these fishes. Mucus from 137 reef fish species was examined by spectrophotometry and 90% were found to have strong absorbance peaks between 290 and 400nm. Most fish species (78%) had more than one peak, that suggests a broad-band ultraviolet screening function for their mucus. Thalassoma duperrey, a tropical wrasse, was able to alter the absorbance of its epithelial mucus in response to both naturally and experimentally manipulated UV regimes. Visual modeling suggests that a fish with UV vision, such as Dascyllus albisella, could detect the changes in mucus spectra of T. duperrey that occurred in these experiments.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Visual pigments in the rods of 38 species of deep-sea fish were examined by microspectrophotometry. 33 species were found to have a single rhodopsin with a wavelength of maximum absorbance ( max) in the range 470–495 nm. Such visual pigments have absorbance maxima close to the wavelengths of maximum spectral transmission of oceanic water. 5 species, however, did not conform to this pattern and visual pigments were found with max values ranging from 451 nm to 539 nm. In 4 of these species two visual pigments were found located in two types of rod. Some 2-pigment species which have unusual red sensitivity, also have red-emitting photophores. These species have both rhodopsin and porphyropsin pigments in their retinae, which was confirmed by HPLC, and the two pigments are apparently located in separate rods in the same retinal area. In deep-sea fishes the occurrence of unusual visual pigments seems to be correlated with aspects of the species' depth ranges. In addition to ecological influences we present evidence, in the form of max spectral clustering, that indicates the degree of molecular constraint imposed on the evolution of visual pigments in the deep-sea.  相似文献   

13.
Reflectance characteristics of the epidermal coverings (hair, feathers) of several white birds and mammals were examined in the visible and ultraviolet regions of the solar spectrum. Non-white phases of the same species, and other non-white animals were examined for comparison. As expected, non-white animals exhibited lower reflectance values than white animals in the visible spectrum. Most species examined demonstrated reduced reflectance in the ultraviolet, reaching minimum values between 290 and 310 nm. In white animals, significant differences were found in the reflectance of UV-A (320–400 nm) and UV-B (280–320 nm) radiation. This accounts for the apparent differences in ultraviolet reflectance among various arctic mammals detected previously with ultraviolet photography. Reflectance patterns in the visible and ultraviolet were not obviously correlated with phylogenetic relationship, nor with the gross structure of hair or feathers.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to compare fluence-response relationships for the production of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in epidermal or dermal DNA of platyfishXiphophorus hybrids irradiated with UVB, and to determine photoreactivation from black light on dimers producedin situ. This was accomplished by quantitative gel electrophoresis of unlabeled DNA following extraction of the DNA and treatment with an enzyme specific for the detection of pyrimidine dimers. The dermis was the target tissue for UV-induced DNA damage inXiphophorus hybrid fish skin. Shapes of dimer-fluence response data following filtered sunlamp irradiation ( > 290 nm) or monochromatic wavelength 302 nm in the epidermis or dermis were different. In the epidermis there was an initial steep upward slope followed by a plateau, whereas in the dermis a linear relationship was observed. The final values of dimers at the high doses were, however, nearly equal in the epidermis and dermis exposed to either radiation. These differences in fluence-response relationships are probably attributable to the intertwining of the epidermis and to the shielding effect of the epidermal layer, with scales leading to a heterogenous population of cells which are exposed to different UV doses. Photoreversal of dimers was readily observed by black light irradiation in both epidermis and dermis irradiated with either > 290 nm or 302 nm.This research was supported by the Office of Health and Environmental Research of the U.S. Department of EnergyThe author is recipient of the National Academy of Sciences' Kobelt Fund Grant  相似文献   

15.
Ratios of chlorophyll fluorescence induced by ultraviolet (UV) and bluegreen (BG) radiation [F(UV)/F(BG)] were determined with a Xe‐PAM fluorometer to test the utility of this technique as a means of non‐intrusively assessing changes in the pigmentation and optical properties of leaves exposed to varying UV exposures under laboratory and field conditions. For plants of Vicia faba and Brassica campestris, grown under controlled‐environmental conditions, F(UV‐B)/F(BG) was negatively correlated with whole‐leaf UV‐B‐absorbing pigment concentrations. Fluorescence ratios of V. faba were similar to, and positively correlated with (r2=0.77 [UV‐B]; 0.85 [UV‐A]), direct measurements of epidermal transmittance made with an integrating sphere. Leaves of 2 of 4 cultivars of field‐grown Glycine max exposed to near‐ambient solar UV‐B at a mid‐latitude site (Buenos Aires, Argentina, 34° S) showed significantly lower abaxial F(UV‐B)/F(BG) values (i.e., lower UV‐B epidermal transmittance) than those exposed to attenuated UV‐B, but solar UV‐B reduction had a minimal effect on F(UV‐B)/F(BG) in plants growing at a high‐latitude site (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, 55° S). Similarly, the exotic Taraxacum officinale did not show significant changes in F(UV‐B)/F(BG) when exposed to very high supplemental UV‐B (biologically effective UV‐B=14–15 kJ m?2 day?1) in the field in Tierra del Fuego, whereas a native species, Gunnera magellanica, showed significant increases in F(UV‐B)/F(BG) relative to those receiving ambient UV‐B. These anomalous fluorescence changes were associated with increases in BG‐absorbing pigments (anthocyanins), but not UV‐B‐absorbing pigments. These results indicate that non‐invasive estimates of epidermal transmittance of UV radiation using chlorophyll fluorescence can detect changes in pigmentation and leaf optical properties induced by UV‐B radiation under both field and laboratory conditions. However, this technique may be of limited utility in cold environments where UV and low temperatures can stimulate the production of BG‐absorbing pigments that interfere with these indirect measurements of UV‐transmittance.  相似文献   

16.
The spectral transmittance of isolated 'intact' upper and lower epidermes as well as the extractable UV-B-absorbing capacity of epidermes and mesophyll were studied in the leaves of exposed and deeply shaded, field-grown plants of Urginea maritima (L.) Baker. Epidermal transmittance in the visible part of the spectrum was high (>80%) in all cases. Transmittance in the UV-B (280-320 nm) was comparatively high (c. 14%) in both the upper and lower epidermes of shaded plants, but more than an order of magnitude lower in exposed plants, with the lowest values observed on the upper leaf epidermis. UV-B transmittance was negatively correlated with the methanol extractable UV-B-absorbing capacity of the epidermes, but was independent of epidermal thickness. The UV-B-absorbing capacity of the mesophyll, when expressed on an area basis, was not affected by exposure. However, it was significantly higher in shaded plants, when expressed on a dry mass basis. The results indicate that although the concentrations of the UV-B-absorbing components of the whole leaf or its epidermis fluctuate according to the site-dependent radiation stress, the opposite is evident for the mesophyll. Therefore, high irradiance in U. maritima, apart from inducing an increase in UV-B-absorbing compounds on a whole leaf basis, also caused a change in the distribution of these compounds between epidermis and mesophyll.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The visual pigments in the rods of 15 species of deep-sea fish were examined by microspectrophotometry. In 13 species a single visual pigment was found. The max of these pigments, which ranged from 475 nm to 488 nm, suggest they give the fish maximum sensitivity to the ambient light in the deep, blue ocean waters where they live. In two species two visual pigments were found in separate rods.Bathylagus bericoides had rhodopsins of max 466 nm and 500 nm andMalacocephalus laevis had two rhodopsins of max 478 nm and 485 nm. It is noted that the species with two visual pigments tend to be dark in colour and live in deeper, darker, water.  相似文献   

18.
This study reports epidermal UV-transmittance in field-grown leaves of ecotypes of six species at three sites along a latitudinal UV-B gradient from Arctic Svalbard, via southern Norway to the French Alps for the years 1999–2001. Unexpectedly, Arctic populations had just as high epidermal UV-screening as alpine populations from lower latitudes. Dryas octopetala was the only species that significantly increased epidermal screening with increasing natural UV-B. Most species, however, showed clear differences in transmittance between years.Under controlled conditions in a growthroom, no ecotypic differences with respect to epidermal UV-B screening were found in Arctic and alpine ecotypes of Oxyria digyna, either in the absence or presence of UV-B radiation. Furthermore, UV-B transmittance in the absence of UV-B radiation in the growthroom was as low (5–6%) as in field-grown plants, indicating a high constitutive screening. Analysis of UV-B-absorbing phenolic compounds in O. digyna displayed no difference between the French Alps and Svalbard ecotypes, while the S. Norway ecotype contained significantly higher amounts of screening compounds. The qualitative analysis showed that the French Alps ecotype had a different composition of flavonoids compared with the two others, and that the ratio between di- and monohydroxylated flavonoids increased from south to north.  相似文献   

19.
In the northern regions UV-B radiation levels have increased due to ozone depletion. A two-week laboratory experiment was conducted to measure the effects of UV-B radiation on the pigmentation, growth, oxygen consumption rate and survival of whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus, and vendace, Coregonus albula, larvae. In May newly hatched embryos were exposed in laboratory aquaria to three CIE weighted UV-B radiation levels: subambient (daily dose 1.37kJm–2), 9% (1.81kJm–2) and 34% higher (2.24kJm–2) than ambient. Control embryos and larvae were not exposed to UV-B. Larvae of whitefish and vendace that were irradiated with highest UV-B level had 32% and 31% more melanin than control larvae, respectively, which we interpret as an apparent induced response. In controls, the species difference revealed 53% more melanin in vendace larvae than in whitefish larvae. UV-B radiation had no effect on the mortality of either species, the survival being high in all treatments (>90%). Additionally, neither growth rate nor the metabolic rate of larvae of either species was affected by UV-B radiation. Thus, in relation to future scenarios UV-B radiation may not be a threat to whitefish or vendace larvae in current or expected radiation levels.  相似文献   

20.
Elevated seawater temperatures have long been accepted as the principal stressor causing the loss of symbiotic algae in corals and other invertebrates with algal symbionts (i.e., bleaching). A secondary factor associated with coral bleaching is solar irradiance, both its visible (PAR: 400–700 nm) and ultraviolet (UVR: 290–400 nm) portions of the spectrum. Here we examined the synergistic role of solar radiation on thermally induced stress and subsequent bleaching in a common Caribbean coral, Montastraea faveolata. Active fluorescent measurements show that steady-state quantum yields of photosystem II (PSII) fluorescence in the zooxanthellae are markedly depressed when exposed to high solar radiation and elevated temperatures, and the concentration of D1 protein is significantly lower in high light when compared to low light treatments under the same thermal stress. Both photosynthetic pigments and mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) are also depressed after experimental exposure to high solar radiation and thermal stress. Host DNA damage is exacerbated under high light conditions and is correlated with the expression of the cell cycle gene p 53, a cellular gatekeeper that modulates the fate of damaged cells between DNA repair processes and apoptotic pathways. These markers of cellular stress in the host and zooxanthellae have in common their response to the enhanced production of reactive oxygen species during exposure to high irradiances of solar radiation and elevated temperatures. Taking these results and previously published data into consideration, we conclude that thermal stress during exposure to high irradiances of solar radiation, or irradiances higher than the current photoacclimatization state, causes damage to both photochemistry and carbon fixation at the same time in zooxanthellae, while DNA damage, apoptosis, or necrosis are occurring in the host tissues of symbiotic cnidarians.Abbreviations PSII Functional absorption cross-section for PSII - Fo, Fm Minimum and maximum yields of chlorophyll a fluorescence measured after dark acclimation (relative units) - Fv Variable fluorescence after dark acclimation (=Fm–Fo), dimensionless - Fv/Fm Maximum quantum yield of photochemistry in PSII measured after dark acclimation, dimensionless - F, Fm Steady-state and maximum yields of chlorophyll a fluorescence measured under ambient light (relative units) - F/Fm Quantum yield of photochemistry in PSII measured at steady state under ambient light Communicated by R.C. Carpenter  相似文献   

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