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1.
Abstract Photosynthetic and anatomical parameters of leaves from the juvenile and adult part of an ivy plant (Hedera helix L.) have been determined and compared with each other. Light-saturated net photosynthesis (per unit leaf area) was about 1.5 times higher in adult leaves than in juvenile ones. The lower photosynthetic capacity of juvenile leaves was caused by a lower stomatal and especially a lower residual conductance to the CO2-transfer. This corresponds with anatomical features of the leaves, i.e. lower stomatal frequency, fewer chloroplasts per cell, and – most important – thinner leaves, as well as with a less efficient photosynthetic apparatus measured as Hill reaction of isolated broken chloroplasts and activity of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase. No differences in the respiration in light (relative to net photosynthesis) and in the CO2-compensation concentration could be detected between the two leaf types. These observed anatomical and photosynthetic parameters of the juvenile and adult ivy leaves resemble those reported for shade and sun leaves, respectively, although the leaves investigated originated from the same light environment.  相似文献   

2.
Robbins , William J. (The New York Botanical Garden, New York, N. Y.) Further observations on juvenile and adult Hedera. Amer. Jour. Bot. 47(6) : 485–491. Illus. 1960.—Plants of arborescent Hedera helix sprayed with gibberellic acid produced juvenile shoots. Juvenile characters appeared in December to March from applications of gibberellic acid made from May to July. Gibberellic acid modified inflorescences toward a vegetative condition. Previous reports that seeds of arborescent Hedera helix produce juvenile plants were confirmed. Seedlings of a variant, Hedera helix ‘238th Street,‘ which has adult-shaped leaves on a vine type of growth produced vines with lobed leaves. Heavy pruning of arborescent Hedera helix caused the production of juvenile shoots.  相似文献   

3.
Alocasia macrorrhiza plants were grown in 1% and 20% full sunlight, and their leaf anatomical and physiological parameters were measured. Total leaf thickness was 41% greater and mesophyll thickness was 52% greater in high-light leaves than in low-light leaves. This increase in thickness resulted from both increased cell size and number. Maximum leaf photosynthetic capacity was also 66% greater in high- than in low-light leaves. When low-light plants were transferred to high light, the thickness of mature leaves did not increase but the thickness of the first leaf to expand after the transfer was significantly greater than that of the low-light leaves. Thus, only leaves that were still expanding at the time of transfer developed leaf thickness greater than plants remaining in low light. Fully mature leaves showed no change in photosynthetic capacity in response to transfer. Leaves that had just completed expansion at the time of low- to high-light transfer were able to develop slightly higher maximum photosynthetic capacities than older leaves. However, full photosynthetic acclimation to the new light environment did not occur until the second new leaf expanded after transfer. These results are discussed in relation to the timing and mechanisms of whole plant acclimation to increased light.  相似文献   

4.
Apices of adult Hedera helix have a larger meristematic area, composed of smaller cells, than those of the juvenile shoots. In shoot tips of juvenile plants, cell divisions in the subapical area occur over a longer portion of the shoot, and cell division is continued for a longer period of time. These features are reminiscent of GA-induced changes in other plants. It is suggested that in experiments designed to shift Hedera from the juvenile to the adult form, consideration should be given to agents which affect both rates of cell division and distribution of dividing cells in the young shoot.  相似文献   

5.
Subdominant evergreen broad-leaved plants occurring in deciduous forests throughout temperate zones have only a short window of optimum photoassimilation in spring before canopy closure. Yet increasing photosynthetic and metabolic activity occurs concurrently with reductions in freezing resistance, resulting in vulnerability of plant tissues to late spring freezing events. Our goal was to document the temporal patterns of photosynthesis versus freezing resistance during spring in adult and juvenile leaf phenotypes of Hedera helix in Switzerland. Freezing resistances in all leaves were well below long-term minimum temperatures experienced at the study site, with adult leaf phenotypes in the forest canopy being more freezing resistant than juvenile leaves occurring closer to the ground. Reductions in freezing resistance were followed by increases in leaf photosynthetic capacities, which appeared synchronized among leaf phenotypes. Adult canopy leaves maintained a higher freezing resistance but lower photosynthetic capacity than juvenile leaves through the end of winter and into early spring. However, shortly after the cessation of freezing temperatures, adult leaves greatly increased their photosynthetic capacity relative to juvenile leaves, yet maintained freezing resistances sufficient to resist late spring freezing events. These patterns highlight the importance of the tradeoff in H. helix between exposure to potentially damaging cold temperatures in late spring and the need for high photosynthetic carbon gains before full canopy closure.  相似文献   

6.
For an analysis of the inhibition of the photosynthetic CO2-uptake after heat stress attached leaves of Hedera helix L. were heat-stressed for 30 min at various temperatures. Subsequently their photosynthetic CO2-uptake, transpiration, respiration in light and darkness, and CO2-compensation concentration were measured under optimal conditions. After heat stress the stomatal resistance increased only corresponding to the raised CO2-concentration inside the leaves (due to the reduced CO2-uptake). The physical resistance between the mesophyll cell walls and the chloroplasts remained unchanged after heat stress. A non-stomatal inhibition of the CO2-uptake is indicated by a strong increase of the CO2-compensation concentration after heat stress. This is hardly due to a stimulation of the respiration in light, as the CO2-evolution into CO2-free air in light was even reduced. Therefore, it must be concluded that the photosynthetic process itself is impaired after heat stress.  相似文献   

7.
Anatomical and physiological leaf characteristics and biomass production of Fatsia japonica plants were studied. Plants were grown in a growth chamber at 300 μmol m-2 s-1 (high light) and 50 μmol m-2 s-1 (low light) photosynthetic photon flux density. Plants grown under high light showed a net maximum photosynthetic rate 44% higher than plants grown under low light; the light compensation point and the light saturation point were also higher in high-light plants. Photosynthetic oxygen evolution in isolated chloroplasts was about 40% higher in high-light plants. However, chlorophyll content on a dry weight basis, on a leaf area basis, and per chloroplast was greater in plants grown under low light. Leaf thickness in high-light plants was 13% higher than in low-light plants. The number of chloroplasts was 30% higher in high-light leaves, while chloroplast size was only slightly higher. Chloroplast ultrastructure was also affected by light. Leaf dry weight, leaf area, and biomass production per plant were drastically reduced under low light. Thus, F. japonica is a plant that is able to acclimate to different photosynthetic photon flux density by altering its anatomical and physiological characteristics. However, low-light acclimation of this plant has a considerable limiting effect on biomass production.  相似文献   

8.
The seasonal course of photosynthetic rate, and light and temperature relations were studied in the dwarf shrubs Vaccinium uliginosum L., deciduous, and Vaccinium vitisidaea L., evergreen, at a subarctic site in northern Sweden, Using the photosynthetic characteristics and meteorological data from the site, the seasonal and life-span carbon dioxide gain was estimated. The photosynthetic capacity of V. uliginosum was at a maximum one month after the start of leaf expansion and declined rapidly in the beginning of September. The old V. vitis-idaea leaves needed about 2 wk to recover full photosynthetic capacity after snow-melt; the current-year V. vitis-idaea leaves needed the same time after bud-break to reach full capacity. The leaves of V. vitis-idaea showed no seasonal trend in photosynthetic capacity after the first two wk of recovery, but their capacity decreased by one third after the first winter and by approximately 10% yr?1 over the following two yr. The seasonal variation in the photosynthetic response to temperature was more marked in V. uliginosum than in V. vitis-idaea. Light saturation occurred at approximately 3000 μmol m?2 s?1 in V. uliginosum and at 60 μmol m?2 s?1 in one-year-old V. vitis-idaea leaves. The leaves of both species had a positive carbon balance at photon flux densities above 5 μmol m?2 s?1. The calculated seasonal CO2 gain was 21 g CO2 g?1 leaf in V. uliginosum and 6–8 g CO2 g?1 in V. vitis-idaea leaves. Life-span CO2 gain for leaves of V. vitis-idaea was the same as in V. uliginosum, viz. 21 g CO2 g?1. One fifth of the CO2 gain of V. vitis-idaea was assimilated during periods when V. uliginosum was leafless.  相似文献   

9.
Hamamelitol is an unusual branched-chain sugar alcohol previously suggested to function as a leaf compatible solute. In this study, we have examined the leaf metabolism and intracelluiar compartmentalization of hamamelitol and other soluble sugars during long-term water stress treatment of Hedera helix (English ivy). Total leaf hamamelitol content was relatively low in greenhouse control plants, but increased 2-fold during water stress treatment to levels approaching those observed in field-grown plants (6–7 μmol g?1 fresh weight). Using density gradient fractionation with non-aqueous solvents, we showed that hamamelitol occurs primarily in the cytoplasm and vacuoles of leaf mesophyll cells. During water stress treatment most of the increase in leaf hamamelitol occurred in the mesophyll cytoplasm, compensating osmotically for a decrease in cytoplasmic sucrose concentration. The maximum concentration of cytoplasmic hamamelitol was 155 mol m?3 and occurred in field-grown plants. Labelling experiments showed that hamamelitol is slowly synthesized from 14CO2 in leaves of H. helix, but is very long-lived (estimated t1/2 of 4 years). Together, these data indicate that hamamelitol probably functions during long-term stress conditions as an osmotically active, compatible solute in plant leaves. We suggest that the signal for enhanced accumulation of hamamelitol during the water stress treatment was initiated by decreased plant growth and increased leaf sucrose hydrolysis.  相似文献   

10.
Andergassen  Sigrid  Bauer  Helmut 《Plant Ecology》2002,161(2):207-213
The common ivy (Hedera helix L.) remains juvenileat its northern, eastern and altitudinal distribution limits although juvenileparts are largely killed by severe frost spells. In order to explain thisdiscrepancy we investigated the seasonal course of frost resistance in variousorgans of juvenile and adult parts of the same H. helixplants. Maximum frost resistance of leaves (LT50–25°C) and axis (xylem parenchyma:LT50 –29°C; cambium: LT50–35°C) was quite the same in juvenile and adultparts. Thus, H. helix is able to acquire full frostresistance in its juvenile phase. However, hardening of leaves was slower anddehardening of axis was faster in juvenile parts. Leaves of juvenile partsremain 2 to 4 K less resistant than those of adult parts untilattaining the maximum resistance. This explains why mainly leaves of thejuvenile parts were damaged following severe frost episodes with temperaturesbelow –20°C. The occurrence of H.helix in its juvenile phase at the frost-caused distribution limitsmay be explained as follows: Leaves of juvenile plants may occasionally bekilled by severe frosts, but regeneration from dormant eyes enables survival.Loss of leaves may impede the change to the adult phase, but even if the plantsbecame adult frost killing of rest buds (2 to 3 K less resistantthan leaves) would induce rejuvenation.  相似文献   

11.
Grapevine plantlets multiplied in vitro were acclimatized at 40 or 90 μmol m−2 s−1 photon flux density for 12 or 16 h per day, respectively. In the high-light regime a decrease in total chlorophyll and an increase in chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b ratio occurred. However, at high-light intensity lower photosynthetic capacities and higher apparent photosynthesis were measured than at the low-light regime. In leaves expanded during acclimatization, the light compensation point was higher in plantlets under high-light while quantum yield was higher in low-light conditions. High-light also gave rise to an increase in carbohydrate concentration. As a whole, the results suggest that high-light increases carbon assimilation and growth although with a low investment in the photosynthetic apparatus. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

Chlorophyllase activity and photosynthetic membrane proteins of two lots of Hedera helix were studied. Both the HV variety with variegated leaves and HC variety with green leaves were observed. Proteins from green, white and white-green portions of leaves differing in age were compared using dodecyl-sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The white or white-green regions of Hedera helix var. aureomarginata (HV) did not differ significantly in chlorophyllase activity.  相似文献   

13.
The Role of Light in Cold Acclimation of Hedera helix L. var. Thorndale   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
The role of light in cold acclimation of Hedera helix L. var. Thorndale appears to differ from that reported for winter annuals. Although light greatly enhances the degree of hardiness attained, cold acclimation is not obligatorily linked to a light requirement. Photoperiods, varying from 8 to 24 hours, received during the cold acclimation period were equally effective in promoting maximum hardiness. Relatively low light intensities and short photoperiods stimulated maximum hardiness, and proportional increases in hardiness in response to increased photoperiods were demonstrated only in stems of prestarved plants. Exclusion of CO2 and high concentrations of photosynthetic inhibitors decreased hardiness, but in no instance was hardiness reduced to the level of the dark control. The data are only compatible with a photosynthetic role of light if it is assumed that only a small portion of the total photosynthates are required to elicit maximum hardiness. Alternatively, the light stimulation which was elicited by low light intensities, short photoperiods, in the absence of CO2, and in the presence of photosynthetic inhibitors, may be a light signal similar to a phytochrome response.  相似文献   

14.
Plants in natural environments are often exposed to fluctuations in light intensity, and leaf‐level acclimation to light may be affected by those fluctuations. Concurrently, leaves acclimated to a given light climate can become progressively shaded as new leaves emerge and grow above them. Acclimation to shade alters characteristics such as photosynthetic capacity. To investigate the interaction of fluctuating light and progressive shading, we exposed three‐week old tomato (Solanum lycopersicum ) plants to either lightflecks or constant light intensities. Lightflecks of 20 s length and 1000 μmol m?2 s?1 peak intensity were applied every 5 min for 16 h per day, for 3 weeks. Lightfleck and constant light treatments received identical daily light sums (15.2 mol m?2 day?1). Photosynthesis was monitored in leaves 2 and 4 (counting from the bottom) during canopy development throughout the experiment. Several dynamic and steady‐state characteristics of photosynthesis became enhanced by fluctuating light when leaves were partially shaded by the upper canopy, but much less so when they were fully exposed to lightflecks. This was the case for CO2‐saturated photosynthesis rates in leaves 2 and 4 growing under lightflecks 14 days into the treatment period. Also, leaf 2 of plants in the lightfleck treatment showed significantly faster rates of photosynthetic induction when exposed to a stepwise change in light intensity on day 15. As the plants grew larger and these leaves became increasingly shaded, acclimation of leaf‐level photosynthesis to lightflecks disappeared. These results highlight continuous acclimation of leaf photosynthesis to changing light conditions inside developing canopies.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Photosynthetic capacities and respiration rates of Alocasia macrorrhiza leaves were measured for 4 weeks following reciprocal transfers between high (20% of full sun) and low (1% of full sun) light environments. Photosynthetic capacities and respiration rates of mature, high-light leaves were 1.7 and 4.5 times those of low-light leaves, respectively. Following transfer, respiration rates adjusted within 1 week to those characteristic of plants grown in the new environment. By contrast, photosynthetic capacities either did not adjust or changed only slowly following transfer. Most of the difference in respiration between high- and low-light leaves was related to the carbohydrate status as determined by the daily PFD and little was directly related to the maintenance costs of the photosynthetic apparatus. Leaf construction cost was directly proportional to maximum photosynthetic capacity. Consequently, although daily carbon gain per unit leaf area was the same for low-light and high to low-light transferred plants within a week after transfer, the carbon return per unit of carbon investment in the leaves remained lower in the high to low transfer plants throughout the 4 week measurement period. Conversely, in high-light, the low leaf construction cost of the low to high-light transferred plants resulted in carbon gain per unit investment just as high as that of the high-light plants.  相似文献   

16.
Plants of a single genotype of wild strawberry, Fragaria virginiana Duchesne, were grown with or without fertilizer in high (406 microeinsteins per square meter per second) and low (80 microeinsteins per square meter per second) light. High-light leaves were thicker than low-light leaves and had greater development of the mesophyll. Within a light level, high-nutrient leaves were thicker, but the proportions of leaf tissues did not change with nutrient level. Maximum net CO2 exchange rate and leaf size were greatest in high-light, high-nutrient leaves and lowest in high-light, low-nutrient leaves. Changes in mesophyll cell volume largely accounted for differences in CO2 exchange rate in low-light leaves, but not in high-light leaves.

Leaf size in these experiments was apparently determined by nutrient and carbon supply. This may explain the observation that the largest leaves produced by wild strawberries in the field occur in high-light, mesic habitats, rather than in shady habitats.

  相似文献   

17.
Twenty-two common British angiosperms were examined for their ability to acclimate photosynthetically to sun and shade conditions. Plants were grown under low irradiance, far-red enriched light (50 μmol m?2 s?1), selected to mimic as closely as possible natural canopy shade, and moderately high light of insufficient irradiance to induce photoinhibitory or photoprotective responses (300 μmol m?2 s?1). Light-and CO2-saturated photosynthetic rates of oxygen evolution (Pmax) and chlorophyll content were measured. Large variation was found in both parameters, and two ‘strategies’ for long-term acclimation were identified: firstly a change in chlorophyll per unit leaf area which was found to correlate positively with photosynthetic capacity, and secondly changes in chlorophyll alb ratio and Pmax, indicative of alterations at the chloroplast level, which were not associated with a change in chlorophyll content per unit leaf area. Combinations of these two strategies may occur, giving rise to the observed diversity in photosynthetic acclimation. The extent and nature of photosynthetic acclimation were compared with an index of shade association, calculated from the association each species has with woodland. It was found that the greatest flexibility for change at the chloroplast level was found in those species possessing an intermediate shade association, whilst acclimation in ‘sun’ species proceeded by a change in chlorophyll content; obligate shade species showed little capacity for acclimation at either the chloroplast or leaf level. A framework for explaining the variation between plant species in leaf-level photosynthetic capacity, in relation to the natural light environment, is presented. This is the first time the potential for light acclimation of photosynthesis in different plant species has been satisfactorily linked to habitat distribution.  相似文献   

18.
Plants of the C4 tree species, Euphorbia forbesii, Sherff and the C3 tree species, Claoxylon sandwicense Muell-Arg., were grown in a full sun and a shade environment designed to simulate the understory of their native Hawiian forest habitat. When grown under shade conditions, both species exhibited a photosynthetic light response typical of shade plants with low light compensation points and low dark respiration rates. E. forbesii, however, exhibited greater acclimation of light saturated photosynthetic rates and no evidence of photoinhibition in high light. In contrast, quantum yields for CO2 uptake and chlorophyll contents were reduced in the high-light as compared to the low-light grown C. sandwicense plants. Both species exhibited similar changes in the intercellular CO2 response curves and chloroplast whole-chain electron transport capacities, suggesting that the underlying mechanisms of light acclimation are similar. Chloroplasts of E. forbesii exhibited large changes in ultrastructure, with much greater thylakoid membrane development in low than high light. In contrast, C. sandwicense exhibited different starch contents, but otherwise similar membrane development in high and low light. The results show that E. forbesii possesses a very flexible photosynthetic apparatus which may account for its ability to survive in the understory of shaded forests.Abbreviations gs = stomatal conductance - HL = high light - LL = low light - Pi = intercellular CO2 partial pressure - PFD = photon flux density  相似文献   

19.
Abstract The purpose of this study was to determine the respective extents to which winter reduction of photosynthetic capacity in ivy (Hedera helix L.) is caused by direct frost injury to the photosynthetic apparatus and by preceding protoplasmic changes connected with the acquisition of frost tolerance. Potted juvenile ivy plants were placed in the open under natural weather conditions whilst others were hardened under controlled conditions and subjected to the desired frost stress. Low non-freezing temperatures induced frost tolerance in ivy leaves down to about – 12°C (50% injury = TL50) without impairing net photosynthetic rate as measured under standard conditions (20°C, light saturation, natural CO2 level; = Standard-Fn. Only if the leaves froze (below ? 3°C to ?4°C) was a reversible inhibition of Standard-Fn observed. As long as the temperatures did not fall below approximately ?8°C the inhibition was small and Standard-Fn reached about 80–90% of the control. In this case the stomatal opening narrowed, giving a poorer supply of CO2 to the mesophyll cells. Maximal frost tolerance (TL5O?20°C to ?24°C) developed only with severe frosts below about ? 10°C. After such frosts, Standard-Fn was reduced to less than 20% of the control. The dependence of the rate of net photosynthesis on the internal CO2 concentration showed a lower initial slope, thus indicating disturbances of chloroplast functions. However, neither in outdoor plants nor in those artificially frosted at – 20°C could there be found an appreciable inhibition of the electron transport capacity from H2O to dichlorophenol indophenol or of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase. If intact, severely frosted ivy plants were then held at higher temperatures (20/15°C), Standard-Fn recovered completely in approximately 10 d. Furthermore, following a frost period with temperatures down to ?12°C, mild weather caused a distinct improvement in Standard-Fn in outdoor plants, and there was no loss of maximum frost tolerance. Thus it can be concluded that the inhibition of Standard-Fn after severe frosts is not due to the development of maximal frost tolerance, but rather may be attributed to frost damage to the photosynthetic apparatus.  相似文献   

20.
Singh  Preety  Srivastava  N.K.  Mishra  A.  Sharma  S. 《Photosynthetica》2000,37(4):509-517
Controlled environment chamber and glasshouse studies were conducted on six herbaceous annual species grown at 350 (AC) and 700 (EC) mol(CO2) mol-1 to determine whether growth at EC resulted in acclimation of the apparent quantum yield of photosynthesis (QY) measured at limiting photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD), or in acclimation of net photosynthetic rate (P N) measured at saturating PPFD. It was also determined whether acclimation in P N at limiting PPFD was correlated with acclimation of carboxylation efficiency or ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration rate measured at saturating PPFD. Growth at EC reduced both the QY and P N at limiting PPFD in three of the six species. The occurrence of photosynthetic acclimation measured at a rate limiting PPFD was independent of whether photosynthetic acclimation was apparent at saturating measurement PPFD. At saturating measurement PPFD, acclimation to EC in the apparent carboxylation efficiency and RuBP regeneration capacity also occurred independently. Thus at least three components of the photosynthetic system may adjust independently when leaves are grown at EC. Estimates of photosynthetic acclimation at both high and low PPFD are necessary to accurately predict photosynthesis at the whole plant or canopy level as [CO2] increases.  相似文献   

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