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1.
We examined whether the exposure of Quercus robur L. to elevated UV-B radiation (280–315 nm) during growth would influence leaf decomposition rate through effects on litter quality. Saplings were exposed for eight months at an outdoor facility in the UK to a 30% elevation above the ambient level of erythemally weighted UV-B radiation under UV-B treatment arrays of fluorescent lamps filtered with cellulose diacetate, which transmitted both UV-B and UV-A (315–400 nm) radiation. Saplings were exposed to elevated UV-A alone under control arrays of lamps filtered with polyester and to ambient radiation under unenergised arrays of lamps. Abscised leaves from saplings were enclosed in 1 mm2 mesh nylon bags, placed in a Quercus–Fraxinus woodland and were sampled at 0.11, 0.53, 1.10 and 1.33 years for dry weight loss, chemical composition and saprotrophic fungal colonization. At abscission, litters from UV-A control arrays had ≈ 7.5% higher lignin/nitrogen ratios than those from UV-B treatment and ambient arrays (P < 0.06). Dry weight loss of leaves treated with elevated UV-B radiation during growth was 2.5% and 5% greater than that of leaves from UV-A control arrays at 0.53 and 1.33 years, respectively. Litter samples from UV-B treatment arrays lost more nitrogen and phosphorus than samples from ambient arrays and more carbon than samples from UV-A control arrays. The annual fractional weight loss of litter from UV-B treatment arrays was 8% and 6% greater than that of litter from UV-A control and ambient arrays, respectively. Regression analyses indicated that the increased decomposition rate of UV-B treated litters was associated with enhanced colonization of leaves by basidiomycete fungi, the most active members of the soil fungal community, and that the frequency of these fungi was negatively associated with the initial lignin/nitrogen ratio of leaves.  相似文献   

2.
Saplings of pedunculate oak (Quercus robur L.) were exposed at an outdoor facility to modulated levels of elevated UV-B radiation (280–315 nm) under treatment arrays of cellulose diacetate-filtered fluorescent lamps which also produced UV-A radiation (315–400 nm). Saplings were also exposed to UV-A radiation alone under control arrays of polyester-filtered lamps and to ambient levels of solar radiation under arrays of unenergized lamps. The UV-B treatment corresponded to a 30% elevation above the ambient level of erythemally weighted UV-B radiation. Sapling growth and the occurrence of associated organisms were examined over two years. In both years, leaves of saplings exposed to UV-B treatment were thicker and smaller in area relative to leaves exposed to ambient and control levels of radiation. UV-B treatment also retarded bud burst at one sampling in the first year of the study. Some responses were recorded which were common to both treatment and control arrays, implying that UV-A radiation, or some other factor associated with energized lamps, was responsible for the observed effects. Saplings under treatment and control arrays were taller in the first year of the study, suffered greater herbivory from chewing insects, and had lower root dry weights and greater insertion heights of secondary branches than saplings exposed to ambient levels of radiation. Exposure of saplings to elevated UV-A radiation alone under control arrays increased estimated leaf volumes in the second year of the study and reduced the number of secondary branches and the total number of branches per sapling after two years, relative to both treatment and ambient arrays. There were no effects of elevated ultraviolet radiation on shoot or total plant weight, root/shoot ratios, stem diameter, the numbers or insertion heights of primary or tertiary branches, total leaf number, timing of leaf fall or frequency of ectomycorrhizas. Our study suggests that any increases in UV-B radiation as a result of stratospheric ozone depletion will influence the growth of Q. robur primarily through effects on leaf morphology.  相似文献   

3.
Appropriate controls in outdoor UV-B supplementation experiments   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Quercus robur L. saplings were exposed in an outdoor experiment to supplemental levels of UV-8 (280–315 nm) radiation using treatment arrays of cellulose diacetate-filtered fluorescent lamps that also produce UV-A (315–400 nm) radiation. Saplings were also exposed to UV-A radiation alone using control arrays of the same lamps filtered with polyester and to ambient levels of radiation, using arrays of unenergized lamps. The UV-B treatment was modulated to maintain a 30% elevation above the ambient level of UV-B radiation, measured by a broad-band sensor weighted with an erythemal action spectrum. Saplings exposed to UV-B radiation beneath treatment arrays developed thicker leaves than those beneath ambient and control arrays. Despite the fact that supplemental levels of UV-A radiation were only a small percentage of ambient levels, apparent UV-A effects were also recorded. Significant increases in sapling height, lammas shoot length and herbivory by chewing insects were observed under treatment and control arrays, relative to ambient, but there were no differences between the responses of saplings under treatment and control. These data imply that supplemental UV-A radiation or other effects associated with energised lamps can significantly affect plant growth parameters and herbivory in outdoor studies. We conclude that the results from current outdoor UV-B supplementation experiments that lack control exposures using polyester-filtered lamps need to be interpreted with caution and that future supplementation experiments should include appropriate controls.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the responses of ultraviolet (UV)‐absorbing compounds, chlorophylls a and b, carotenoids and the growth responses of the pleurocarpous moss Pleurozium schreberi (Britt.) Mitt. to enhanced UV radiation in situ. The moss was exposed to a 52% elevation above the ambient level of erythemally weighted UV‐B radiation, simulating an approximate 20% reduction in the ozone column, in a dry pine forest in Sodankylä, Finland (67 °22′N, 26 °38′E), under arrays of lamps filtered with cellulose diacetate, which transmitted both UV‐B and UV‐A radiation. The moss was also exposed to elevated UV‐A radiation under control arrays of lamps filtered with Melinex polyester and to ambient radiation under arrays with no lamps in them. Effects of enhanced UV radiation on P. schreberi were recorded during the first 3 years of exposure. Enhanced UV‐B radiation did not affect the segment height growth of the moss. The annual dry mass after the second growing season was higher in the UV‐A control than in the other treatments, and dry mass decreased significantly during the third treatment year in both UV treatments compared with the ambient. The specific leaf area of the UV‐B‐treated mosses was significantly higher than the ambient control mosses during the first 2 years. An increase of UV‐absorbing compounds was found in the mosses under enhanced UV‐B radiation compared with the UV‐A control mosses during the first year. Even though the treatment effect on UV‐absorbing compounds was transient, the concentrations of these compounds correlated with the amount of UV‐A and UV‐B radiation received under the elevated UV‐B treatment. A correlation with the irradiation of previous days and preceding month of the sampling day was found. A seasonal reduction occurred in the amount of UV‐absorbing compounds from the beginning of the summer to late summer. The amount of photosynthetic pigments correlated with the amount of photosynthetically active radiation. The moss P. schreberi was thus found to tolerate increasing UV‐B radiation. Our data indicate that P. schreberi tolerates a 52% increase in erythemally weighted UV‐B radiation above ambient, responding during the first few years of exposure by increasing UV‐absorbing compounds and specific leaf area, and decreasing annual dry mass, and then acclimating to its altered radiation environment.  相似文献   

5.
Plants ofLolium perenne, grown with and without the balansoidfungal leaf endophyteNeotyphodium lolii, were exposed to threeultraviolet radiation treatments at an outdoor facility in theUK for 172 d. Plants were exposed to either (a) a 30% elevationabove the ambient erythemally-weighted level of UV-B (280–315nm) radiation under banks of cellulose diacetate filtered fluorescentlamps that also produce UV-A (315–400 nm) radiation (UV-B+A);(b) elevated UV-A radiation alone under banks of polyester filteredlamps; or (c) ambient levels of solar radiation under banksof unenergized lamps. The fertility of plants grown withN. loliiwassignificantly reduced by the elevated UV-B+A exposure. After172 d, these plants produced 70% fewer spikes, 75% fewer seeds,71% lower total weight of seed and 78% fewer seeds per g d.wt of plant tissue than plants colonized byN. loliiwhich wereexposed to ambient radiation. There was no discernible effectof elevated UV-B+A exposure on the fertility of endophyte-freeplants. Plants irradiated with UV-B+A developed 14% thickerleaves than those exposed to ambient radiation. Those whichwere irradiated with elevated UV-A alone produced seeds thatwere 20% heavier than plants exposed to ambient levels of radiation.Plants grown withN. loliihad 7% thicker leaves, 4% thicker stembases and 7% fewer tillers than those grown without it. Thefresh mass of tillers of plants grown withN. loliiwas 11% greaterthan those of endophyte-free plants, owing to their higher moisturecontents. These results suggest that the fertility ofL. perennecolonizedbyN. loliiin the natural environment could be deleteriouslyaffected by elevated fluxes of UV-B radiation associated withstratospheric ozone depletion and that this may affect the populationdynamics of the species.Copyright 1998 Annals of Botany Company Fungal leaf endophyte,Neotyphodium lolii, perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne), stratospheric ozone depletion, UV-B radiation.  相似文献   

6.
Recent reduction in the ozone shield due to manufactured chlorofluorocarbons raised considerable interest in the ecological and physiological consequences of UV‐B radiation (λ=280–315 nm) in macroalgae. However, early life stages of macroalgae have received little attention in regard to their UV‐B sensitivity and UV‐B defensive mechanisms. Germination of UV‐B irradiated spores of the intertidal green alga Ulva pertusa Kjellman was significantly lower than in unexposed controls, and the degree of reduction correlated with the UV doses. After exposure to moderate levels of UV‐B irradiation, subsequent exposure to visible light caused differential germination in an irradiance‐ and wavelength‐dependent manner. Significantly higher germination was found at higher photon irradiances and in blue light compared with white and red light. The action spectrum for photoreactivation of germination in UV‐B irradiated U. pertusa spores shows a major peak at 435 nm with a smaller but significant peak at 385 nm. When exposed to December sunlight, the germination percentage of U. pertusa spores exposed to 1 h of solar radiation reached 100% regardless of the irradiation treatment conditions. After a 2‐h exposure to sunlight, however, there was complete inhibition of germination in PAR+UV‐A+UV‐B in contrast to 100% germination in PAR or PAR+UV‐A. In addition to mat‐forming characteristics that would act as a selective UV‐B filter for settled spores under the parental canopy, light‐driven repair of germination after UV‐B exposure could explain successful continuation of U. pertusa spore germination in intertidal settings possibly affected by intense solar UV‐B radiation.  相似文献   

7.
From studies on living plant tissues it has been inferred that elevated UV‐B radiation could negatively affect litter quality and subsequent decomposition. However, in general, the effects of UV‐B radiation on litter chemistry and decomposition reported in the literature are variable and are often only marginally (if at all) significant. This might be due to the ecologically unrealistic conditions under which these experiments were performed. We investigated the effects of elevated UV‐B radiation on litter quality and subsequent decomposition on initial litter chemistry and long‐term (2 years) decomposition of freshly senesced Carex arenaria and Calamagrostis epigejos leaf litter under ecologically realistic conditions. This material was collected from a dune grassland that had received UV‐B radiation treatments for three growing seasons. It was then used in a 2‐year decomposition study using litter bags. We found no significant effects of elevated UV‐B radiation on any of the litter chemistry parameters in either of the two species, nor did we find significant effects on litter decomposition. However, we did find significant differences in litter decomposition between the species. These differences were related to the interspecific differences in litter chemistry, particularly the litter phenolics concentration. These results show that litter quality and decomposition in dune grasslands are, also under ecologically realistic conditions, not affected by UV‐B radiation. Instead, litter decomposition is determined by constitutive interspecific differences in litter chemistry. In conclusion, with our results added to the already existing literature, the preponderance of evidence now clearly suggests that elevated UV‐B radiation has very little, if any, impact on litter quality and subsequent decomposition in real ecosystems.  相似文献   

8.
The ecosystems of Tierra del Fuego (in southern Patagonia, Argentina) are seasonally exposed to elevated levels of ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐B: 280–315 nm), due to the passage of the ‘ozone hole’ over this region. In the experiments reported in this article the effects of solar UV‐B and UV‐A (315–400 nm) on two UV‐B defence‐related processes: the accumulation of protective UV‐absorbing compounds and DNA repair, were tested. It was found that the accumulation of UV‐absorbing sunscreens in Gunnera magellanica leaves was not affected by plant exposure to ambient UV radiation. Photorepair was the predominant mechanism of cyclobutane‐pyrimidine dimer (CPD) removal in G. magellanica. Plants exposed to solar UV had higher CPD repair capacity under optimal conditions of temperature (25 °C) than plants grown under attenuated UV. There was no measurable repair at 8 °C. The rates of CPD repair in G. magellanica plants were modest in comparison with other species and, under equivalent conditions, were about 50% lower than the repair rates of Arabidopsis thaliana (Ler ecotype). Collectively our results suggest that the susceptibility of G. magellanica plants to current ambient levels of solar UV‐B in southern Patagonia may be related to a low DNA repair capacity.  相似文献   

9.
Elevated UV-B radiation effects on experimental grassland communities   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Experimental grassland communities (turves) were exposed to supplemental levels of UV-B radiation (280–315 nm) at an outdoor facility, under treatment arrays of cellulose diacetate-filtered fluorescent lamps which also produce UV-A radiation (315–400 nm). Control treatments consisted of arrays of polyester-filtered lamps, which allowed for exposure to UV-A radiation alone, and arrays of unenergized lamps allowing for exposure to ambient levels of solar radiation.  相似文献   

10.
Seasonal variation in leaf phenolic composition may be important for acclimation of plants to seasonal changes in their biotic and abiotic environment. For a realistic assessment of how plants respond to solar UV‐B (280–315 nm) and UV‐A (315–400 nm) radiation, seasonal variation in both environment and plant responses needs to be taken into account. This also has implications for studies concerning stratospheric ozone depletion and resulting increased UV‐B radiation, as other environmental variables and/or plant phenology could interact with UV radiation. To elucidate this, we established a field experiment using plastic films attenuating different parts of the solar UV spectrum. The concentration of individual phenolic compounds was measured during one growing season in leaves of grey alder (Alnus incana) and white birch (Betula pubescens) trees. Our results showed changes in concentration of, e.g. hydrolyzable tannins in birch that suggest an effect of UV‐A alone and e.g. chlorogenic acids in alder indicate a quadratic effect of UV‐B irradiance and both linear and quadratic effect for UV‐A in second‐degree polynomial fits. Further, there was interaction between treatment and sampling time for some individual metabolites; hence, the UV response varied during the season. In addition to the UV effects, three temporal patterns emerged in the concentrations of particular groups of phenolics. Possible implications for both sampling methods and timing are discussed. Moreover, our results highlight differences in responses of the two tree species, which are taken to indicate differences in their ecological niche differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
Altered surface ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B) radiation resulting from a combination of factors that include changes in stratospheric ozone concentrations, cloud cover, and aerosol conditions may affect litter decomposition and, thus, terrestrial nutrient cycling on a global scale. Although litter decomposition rates vary across biomes, patterns of decomposition suggest that UV‐B radiation accelerates litter decay in xeric environments where precipitation is infrequent. However, under more frequent precipitation regimes where litter decay rates are characteristically high, the effect of UV‐B radiation on litter decomposition has not been fully elucidated. To evaluate this association between moisture regime and UV‐B exposure, a litter decomposition experiment was designed for aspen (Populus tremuloides) leaf litter, where conditions that influence both abiotic (photodegradation) and biotic (microbial) processes could be manipulated quantitatively. We found that experimentally increasing UV‐B exposure (0, 7.4, and 11.2 kJ m?2 day?1, respectively) did not consistently increase litter decomposition rates across simulated precipitation frequencies of 4, 12, and 24 days. Instead, a UV‐B exposure of 11.2 kJ m?2 day?1 resulted in a 13% decrease in decomposition rates under the 4‐day precipitation frequency, but an increase of 80% under the 24‐day frequency. Furthermore, the same UV‐B dose increased litter decomposition rates under the 24‐day precipitation frequency by 78% even in conditions where microbial activity was suppressed. Therefore, under more xeric conditions, greater exposure to UV‐B radiation increased decomposition rates, presumably through photodegradation. In contrast, when decomposition was not moisture‐limited, greater UV‐B exposure slowed decomposition rates, most likely from the resulting inhibition of microbial activity. Ultimately, these experimental results highlight UV‐B radiation as a potential driver of decomposition, as well as indicate that both the direction and magnitude of the UV‐B effect is dependent on moisture availability, a factor that may change according to future patterns in global precipitation.  相似文献   

12.
Stratospheric ozone depletion by anthropogenic chlorofluorocarbons has lead to increases in ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐B; 280–320 nm) along the Antarctic Peninsula during the austral spring. We manipulated UV‐B levels around plants of Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica; Poaceae) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis; Caryophyllaceae) for one field season near Palmer Station along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. Treatments involved placing frames over naturally growing plants that either (1) held filters that absorbed most biologically effective radiation (UV‐BBE; ‘reduced UV‐B’, 22% of ambient UV‐BBE levels), (2) held filters that transmitted most UV‐BBE (‘near‐ambient UV‐B’, 87% of ambient UV‐BBE levels), or (3) lacked filters (‘ambient UV‐B’). Leaves on D. antarctica exposed to near‐ambient and ambient UV‐B were 16–17% shorter than those exposed to reduced UV‐B, and this was associated with shorter epidermal cells at the leaf base and tip. Leaves on C. quitensis exposed to near‐ambient and ambient UV‐B tended to be shorter (P=0.18) and epidermal cells at the leaf base tended to be smaller than those under reduced UV‐B (P<0.10). In order to further explain reductions in leaf length, we examined leaf concentrations of insoluble (cell‐wall bound) phenylpropanoids, since it has been proposed that wall‐bound phenylpropanoids such as ferulic acid may constrain cell expansion and leaf elongation. In both species, HPLC analysis revealed that ferulic and p‐coumaric acid were major components of both insoluble and soluble phenylpropanoids. Although there were no significant differences in concentrations between UV‐B treatments, concentrations of insoluble ferulic acid in D. antarctica tended to be higher under ambient and near‐ambient UV‐B than under reduced UV‐B (P=0.17). We also examined bulk‐leaf concentrations of soluble (methanol extractable) UV‐B‐absorbing compounds and found that concentrations were higher in plants exposed to near‐ambient and ambient UV‐B than in plants exposed to reduced UV‐B. We also assessed the UV‐B‐screening effectiveness of leaves that had developed on plants at the field site with a fiber‐optic microprobe. Leaf epidermal transmittance of 300‐nm UV‐B was 4.0 and 0.6% for D. antarctica and C. quitensis, respectively, which is low compared to grasses and herbaceous dicotyledonous plants found in more temperate climates. While the leaves of Antarctic vascular plants are relatively effective at screening UV‐B, levels of UV‐B in Antarctica are sufficient to reduce leaf epidermal cell size and leaf elongation in these species, although the mechanisms for these reductions remain unclear.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of long‐term elevated UV‐B radiation on silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) seedlings were studied over three growing seasons in an outdoor experiment in Finland started 64 days after germination. One group of seedlings was exposed to a constant 50% increase in UV‐BCIE radiation, which corresponds to 20–25% of ozone depletion; another group received a small increase in UV‐A radiation and a third (the control group) received ambient solar radiation. Changes in growth appeared during the third growing season; the stems of the UV‐B treated seedlings were thinner and their height tended to be shorter compared with that of the control seedlings. In contrast, there were no UV‐B effects on biomass, bud burst, bud dry weights, leaf area, rust frequency index or chlorophyll concentrations in any of the summers. During the three‐year study, the flavonols were significantly increased by the elevated UV‐B only in the first growing season. The responses varied greatly among individual compounds; the most induced were the quercetin glycosides, while the main flavonols, myricetins, were reduced by the UV‐A control treatment. In the second summer phenolic acids, such as 3,4′‐dihydroxypropiophenone‐3‐glucoside, neochlorogenic acid and 5‐coumarylquinic acid, were increased by the UV‐B treatment. In the third year, the constitutive concentrations of phenolics were not affected by the UV‐B treatment.  相似文献   

14.
15.
We examined the influence of solar ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐B; 280–315 nm) on the growth of Colobanthus quitensis plants by placing them under contrasting UV‐B filters at Palmer Station, along the Antarctic Peninsula. The filters reduced diurnal biologically effective UV‐B (UV‐BBE) either by 83% (‘reduced UV‐B’) or by 12% (‘near‐ambient UV‐B’) over the 63 day experiment (7 November 1998–8 January 1999). Ozone column depletion averaged 17% during the experiment. Relative growth and net assimilation rates of plants exposed to near‐ambient UV‐B were 30 and 20% lower, respectively, than those of plants exposed to reduced UV‐B. The former plants produced 29% less total biomass, as a result of containing 54% less aboveground biomass. These reductions in aboveground biomass were mainly the result of a 45% reduction in shoot biomass, and a 31% reduction in reproductive biomass. Reductions in shoot biomass were owing to an 18% reduction in branch production by main shoots, while reductions in reproductive biomass were the result of a 19% reduction in individual capsule mass. Total plant leaf area was reduced by 19% under near‐ambient UV‐B, although total leaf biomass was unaffected because leaves had a greater specific leaf mass. The reduction in plant leaf area under near‐ambient UV‐B was attributable to: (1) production of 11% fewer leaves per main shoot system and plant, which resulted from an 18% reduction in branch production by main shoots. Leaf production per individual main shoot or branch was not affected; (2) shorter leaf longevity—main shoots contained 14% fewer green leaves at a given time; and (3) smaller individual leaves—leaf elongation rates were 14% slower and mature leaves were 13% shorter.  相似文献   

16.
In nature, ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B) radiation is highly heterogeneous, both spatially and temporally. Plants exposed to UV‐B radiation produce UV‐B absorbing compounds that function as a protective filter. For clonal plants under heterogeneous UV‐B radiation conditions, integration among ramets can allow irradiated ramets to benefit un‐irradiated ramets by causing them to increase their UV‐B absorbing compounds content. In this study, we evaluated integration between pairs of clonal ramets of Glechoma longituba under heterogeneous or homogeneous UV‐B conditions. We determined the levels of UV‐B absorbing compounds, nitric oxide (NO) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and measured the activity of phenylalanine ammonia‐lyase (PAL) in connected ramet pairs under homogeneous or heterogeneous UV‐B conditions. Under heterogeneous UV‐B conditions, the UV‐B absorbing compounds content increased in leaves of irradiated and un‐irradiated ramets, but not in the connecting stolons. The NO content increased in irradiated and un‐irradiated leaves and stolons, but the H2O2 content did not. Application of NO synthesis inhibitors and an NO blocker to irradiated ramets blocked the increase in UV‐B absorbing compounds and PAL activity in un‐irradiated ramets. These results suggested that NO is involved in the integration process for UV‐B absorbing compounds among ramets. Our findings suggested that a UV‐B‐induced increase in NO transmits a signal to un‐irradiated ramets via the stolon, leading to an increase in PAL activity and UV‐B absorbing compounds content. The internal translocation of signal enables members of clonal networks to function as a whole unit and to mount an efficient defensive response to localized UV‐B radiation.  相似文献   

17.
Better understanding of crop responses to projected changes in climate is an important requirement. An experiment was conducted in sunlit, controlled environment chambers known as soil–plant–atmosphere–research units to determine the interactive effects of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration [CO2] and ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B) radiation on cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) growth, development and leaf photosynthetic characteristics. Six treatments were used, comprising two levels of [CO2] (360 and 720 µmol mol?1) and three levels of 0 (control), 7.7 and 15.1 kJ m?2 d?1 biologically effective UV‐B radiations within each CO2 level. Treatments were imposed for 66 d from emergence until 3 weeks after the first flower stage. Plants grown in elevated [CO2] had greater leaf area and higher leaf photosynthesis, non‐structural carbohydrates, and total biomass than plants in ambient [CO2]. Neither dry matter partitioning among plant organs nor pigment concentrations was affected by elevated [CO2]. On the other hand, high UV‐B (15.1 kJ m?2 d?1) radiation treatment altered growth resulting in shorter stem and branch lengths and smaller leaf area. Shorter plants at high UV‐B radiation were related to internode lengths rather than the number of mainstem nodes. Fruit dry matter accumulation was most sensitive to UV‐B radiation due to fruit abscission. Even under 7.7 kJ m?2 d?1 of UV‐B radiation, fruit dry weight was significantly lower than the control although total biomass and leaf photosynthesis did not differ from the control. The UV‐B radiation of 15.1 kJ m?2 d?1 reduced both total (43%) and fruit (88%) dry weights due to smaller leaf area and lower leaf net photosynthesis. Elevated [CO2] did not ameliorate the adverse effects of UV‐B radiation on cotton growth and physiology, particularly the boll retention under UV‐B stress.  相似文献   

18.
We performed field and laboratory experiments to evaluate the effect of solar radiation (UVR and PAR) on leaf litter decomposition, fungal biomass and sporulation rates, in the Andean Patagonia, where high UVR levels are common. Leaves of Alnus glutinosa exposed to three treatments, normal radiation (PAR + UVR), protected from UVR and protected from total radiation (SHADE) by plastic films lost 31–37% of their mass. Leaves of Nothofagus pumilio lost 61–64% of their mass under the same conditions. For both leaf species, differences in mass losses among treatments were not statistically significant. Sporulation rates were significantly lower in the SHADE treatment. Fungal biomass accounted for 6.2 to 7.1% of leaf mass, without significant differences among treatments. In the laboratory, leaf discs of A. glutinosa colonized by single species of aquatic hyphomycetes (Articulospora tetracladia, Flagellospora curta or Lunulospora curvula) and exposed to or protected from UVR did not differ in mass loss and sporulation rates. Pure cultures of two fungal species grew at the same rates when exposed to light (PAR and PAR + UVR) or to the SHADE. In summary, we found no evidences that current high levels of UV radiation affect litter decomposition mediated by aquatic hyphomycetes. (© 2010 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The induction of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) by ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐B, 280–315 nm) and repair mechanisms were studied in the lichen Cladonia arbuscula ssp. mitis exposed to different temperatures and water status conditions. In addition, the development and repair of CPDs were studied in relation to the different developmental stages of the lichen thallus podetial branches. Air‐dried lichen thalli exposed to UV‐B radiation combined with relatively high visible light (HL, 800 μmol m?2 s?1; 400–700 nm) for 7 days showed a progressive increase of CPDs with no substantial repair, although HL was present during and after irradiation with UV‐B. Fully hydrated lichen thalli, that had not been previously exposed to UV‐B radiation for 7 days, were given short‐term UV‐B radiation treatment at 25°C, and accumulated DNA lesions in the form of CPDs, with repair occurring when they were exposed to photoreactivating conditions (2 h of 300 μmol m?2 s?1, 400–700 nm). A different pattern was observed when fully hydrated thalli were exposed to short‐term UV‐B radiation at 2°C, in comparison with exposure at 25°C. High levels of CPDs were induced at 2°C under UV‐B irradiation, without significant repair under subsequent photoreactivating light. Likewise, when PAR (300 μmol m?2 s?1) and UV‐B radiation were given simultaneously, the CPD levels were not lowered. Throughout all experiments the youngest, less differentiated parts of the lichen thallus – namely ‘tips’, according to our arbitrary subdivision – were the parts showing the highest levels of CPD accumulation and the lowest levels of repair in comparison with the older thallus tissue (‘stems’). Thus the experiments showed that Cladonia arbuscula ssp. mitis is sensitive to UV‐B irradiation in the air‐dried state and is not able to completely repair the damage caused by the radiation. Furthermore, temperature plays a role in the DNA damage repairing capacity of this lichen, since even when fully hydrated, C. arbuscula ssp. mitis did not repair DNA damage at the low temperatures.  相似文献   

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