首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Photosynthetic production of oxygen by phytoplankton assemblagedominated by Peridinium in Lake Kinneret, Israel, generallyexceeds the molar equivalent rate of carbon assimilation. Carbonassimilation occurs only if oxygenic photosynthesis exceedsa light-dependent threshold. Assimilation quotients (mol C molO2–1) are a variable function of irradiance, and typicallyonly about one-half of the photoreductant produced during oxygenicphotosynthesis is used for reduction of carbon dioxide. Mostof the residual oxygenic photoreductant probably is used forlight-dependent reduction of nitrate, which competes with carbondioxide for oxygenic photoreductant. Nitrate is an importantsource of nitrogen for this algal assemblage, and light-dependentnitrate reduction probably is much larger than carbon dioxidereduction at lowest irradiances in the euphotic zone. Oxygenproduction also may be much larger than carbon assimilationat low light levels in other environments where oxidized formsof nitrogen are important nitrogenous nutrients for phytoplankton,as in the lower euphotic zone of the sea, where low rates ofcarbon assimilation by phytoplankton have been thought to beinconsistent with the amount of oxygen that accumulates duringsummer.  相似文献   

2.
Leaves deep in canopies can suddenly be exposed to increased irradiances following e.g. gap formation in forests or pruning in crops. Studies on the acclimation of photosynthesis to increased irradiance have mainly focused on the changes in photosynthetic capacity (Amax), although actual irradiance often remains below saturating level. We investigated the effect of changes in irradiance on the photosynthesis irradiance response and on nitrogen allocation in fully grown leaves of Cucumis sativus. Leaves that fully developed under low (50 µmol m?2 s?1) or moderate (200 µmol m?2 s?1) irradiance were subsequently exposed to, respectively, moderate (LM‐leaves) or low (ML‐leaves) irradiance or kept at constant irradiance level (LL‐ and MM‐leaves). Acclimation of photosynthesis occurred within 7 days with final Amax highest in MM‐leaves, lowest in LL‐leaves and intermediate in ML‐ and LM‐leaves, whereas full acclimation of thylakoid processes underlying photosystem II (PSII) efficiency and non‐photochemical quenching occurred in ML‐ and LM‐leaves. Dark respiration correlated with irradiance level, but not with Amax. Light‐limited quantum efficiency was similar in all leaves. The increase in photosynthesis at moderate irradiance in LM‐leaves was primarily driven by nitrogen import, and nitrogen remained allocated in a similar ratio to Rubisco and bioenergetics, while allocation to light harvesting relatively decreased. A contrary response of nitrogen was associated with the decrease in photosynthesis in ML‐leaves. Net assimilation of LM‐leaves under moderate irradiance remained lower than in MM‐leaves, revealing the importance of photosynthetic acclimation during the leaf developmental phase for crop productivity in scenarios with realistic, moderate fluctuations in irradiance that leaves can be exposed to.  相似文献   

3.
Irradiance-dependent rates of photosynthesis and cell division of six species of microalgae isolated from the benthos, plankton and sea ice microbial community in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica were compared. Microalgae isolated from different photic environments had distinct photosynthetic and growth characteristics. For benthic and ice algae, photosynthesis saturated at 6 to 20 μE.m?2.s?1 and was photoinhibited at 10 to 80 μE.m?2.s?1 while for the planktonic algae, saturation irradiances were up to 13 times higher and photoinhibition was not detected. The slope of the light-limited portion of the P-I relationship was up to 50 times greater for the benthic algae than for either the ice or planktonic algae suggesting that benthic algae used the low irradiances more efficiently for carbon uptake. Cell division was dependent on the incubation irradiance for all but one microalga examined. The dependence of division rates on irradiance was however much smaller than for carbon uptake, suggesting that cell division buffers the influence of short term variations of irradiance on cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

4.
Factors that contribute to interspecific variation in photosynthetic nitrogen-use efficiency (PNUE, the ratio of CO2 assimilation rate to leaf organic nitrogen content) were investigated, comparing ten dicotyledonous species that differ inherently in specific leaf area (SLA, leaf area:leaf dry mass). Plants were grown hydroponically in controlled environment cabinets at two irradiances (200 and 1000 μmol m–2 s–1). CO2 and irradiance response curves of photosynthesis were measured followed by analysis of the chlorophyll, Rubisco, nitrate and total nitrogen contents of the leaves. At both irradiances, SLA ranged more than twofold across species. High-SLA species had higher in situ rates of photosynthesis per unit leaf mass, but similar rates on an area basis. The organic N content per unit leaf area was lower for the high-SLA species and consequently PNUE at ambient light conditions (PNUEamb) was higher in those plants. Differences were somewhat smaller, but still present, when PNUE was determined at saturating irradiances (PNUEmax). An assessment was made of the relative importance of the various factors that underlay interspecific variation in PNUE. For plants grown under low irradiance, PNUEamb of high-SLA species was higher primarily due to their lower N content per unit leaf area. Low-SLA species clearly had an overinvestment in photosynthetic N under these conditions. In addition, high SLA-species allocated a larger fraction of organic nitrogen to thylakoids and Rubisco, which further increased PNUEamb. High-SLA species grown under high irradiance showed higher PNUEamb mainly due to a higher Rubisco specific activity. Other factors that contributed were again their lower contents of Norg per unit leaf area and a higher fraction of photosynthetic N in electron transport and Rubisco. For PNUEmax, differences between species in organic leaf nitrogen content per se were no longer important and higher PNUEmax of the high SLA species was due to a higher fraction of N in␣photosynthetic compounds (for low-light plants) and a higher Rubisco specific activity (for high-light grown plants). Received: 11 October 1997 / Accepted: 9 April 1998  相似文献   

5.
In our previous study on geranium, we showed that increases in growth irradiance from sub-optimal to near-optimal could delay boron deficiency effects on photosynthesis. In this study, we further investigated the effects of growth irradiance on tolerance to B stress by growing geranium (Pelargonium × hortorum cv. Maverick White) under sub- to supra-optimal B concentrations (4.5, 45, and 450 μM) and under three irradiances of 100, 300, or 500 μmol m?2 s?1 PAR for 30 d. In general, at low and medium irradiances, sub- and supra-optimal B availability decreased root and shoot dry masses, but at high irradiance, the B stress was prevented. Net photosynthetic rate decreased by the supra-optimal B concentration at the high irradiance only suggesting B-related photoinhibition. Tissue B content and root specific B uptake only modestly decreased by the low B treatment, but increased greatly by the high B availability, and the higher irradiance decreased the tissue B content and the root B uptake only at the low and medium B supplies. Interestingly, the increases in irradiance decreased the content and uptake of all other nutrients, except Fe uptake. Effects of the B stress on the content of other nutrients were variable, but the B stress often exacerbated decreases in nutrient content with the increasing irradiance which would be especially important under nutrient-limiting conditions. Hence, in this study, the B stress effects on growth were mitigated by the increases in growth irradiance, which offset negative effects on physiology, and the protective effects of irradiance were likely caused by its positive effects on plant carbon/energy status rather than on tissue B content or B uptake.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effects of irradiance during growth on biomass allocation, growth rates, leaf chlorophyll and protein contents, and on gas exchange responses to irradiance and CO2 partial pressures of the evergreen, sclerophyllous, chaparral shrub, Ceanothus megacarpus were determined. Plants were grown at 4 irradiances for the growth experiments, 8, 17, 25, 41 nE cm-2 sec-1, and at 2 irradiances, 9 and 50 nE cm-2 sec-1, for the other comparisons.At higher irradiances root/shoot ratios were somewhat greater and specific leaf weights were much greater, while leaf area ratios were much lower and leaf weight ratios were slightly lower than at lower irradiances. Relative growth rates increased with increasing irradiance up to 25 nE cm-2 sec-1 and then leveled off, while unit leaf area rates increased steeply and unit leaf weight rates increased more gradually up to the highest growth irradiance.Leaves grown at 9 nE cm-2 sec-1 had less total chlorophyll per unit leaf area and more per unit leaf weight than those grown at 50 nE cm-2 sec-1. In a reverse of what is commonly found, low irradiance grown leaves had significantly higher chlorophyll a/b than high irradiance grown leaves. High irradiance grown leaves had much more total soluble protein per unit leaf area and per unit dry weight, and they had much higher soluble protein/chlorophyll than low irradiance grown leaves.High irradiance grown leaves had higher rates of respiration in very dim light, required higher irradiances for photosynthetic saturation and had higher irradiance saturated rates of photosynthesis than low irradiance grown leaves. CO2 compensation irradiances for leaves of both treatments were very low, <5 nE cm-2 sec-1. Leaves grown under low and those grown under high irradiances reached 95% of their saturated photosynthetic rates at 65 and 85 nE cm-2 sec-1, respectively. Irradiance saturated rates of photosynthesis were high compared to other chaparral shrubs, 1.3 for low and 1.9 nmol CO2 cm-2 sec-1 for high irradiance grown leaves. A very unusual finding was that leaf conductances to H2O were significantly lower in the high irradiance grown leaves than in the low irradiance grown leaves. This, plus the differences in photosynthetic rates, resulted in higher water use efficiencies by the high irradiance grown leaves. High irradiance grown leaves had higher rates of photosynthesis at any particular intercellular CO2 partial pressure and also responded more steeply to increasing CO2 partial pressure than did low irradiance grown leaves. Leaves from both treatments showed reduced photosynthetic capability after being subjected to low CO2 partial pressures (100 bars) under high irradiances. This treatment was more detrimental to leaves grown under low irradiances.The ecological implications of these findings are discussed in terms of chaparral shrub community structure. We suggest that light availability may be an important determinant of chaparral community structure through its effects on water use efficiencies rather than on net carbon gain.  相似文献   

7.
Short-term effects of irradiance (0-1560 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)), temperature (10-25 degrees C), and salinity (40-160) on oxygenic photosynthesis and oxygen consumption in a hypersaline mat (Salin-de-Giraud, France) were investigated with microsensors under controlled laboratory conditions. Dark O(2) consumption rates were mainly regulated by the mass transfer limitations imposed by the diffusive boundary layer. Areal rates of net photosynthesis increased with irradiance and saturated at irradiances >400 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1). At low irradiances, oxygen consumption increased more strongly with temperature than photosynthesis, whereas the opposite was observed at saturating irradiances. Net photosynthesis vs. irradiance curves were almost unaffected by decreasing salinity (100 to 40), whereas increasing salinities (100 to 160) led to a decrease of net photosynthesis at each irradiance. Dark O(2) consumption rates, maximal gross and net photosynthesis at light saturation were relatively constant over a broad salinity range (60-100) and decreased at salinities above the in situ salinity of 100. Within the range of natural variation, temperature was more important than salinity in regulating photosynthesis and oxygen consumption. At higher salinities the inhibitory impact of salinity on these processes and therefore the importance of salinity as a regulating environmental parameter increased, indicating that in more hypersaline systems, salinity has a stronger limiting effect on microbial activity.  相似文献   

8.
We have evaluated the effects of short-term changes in incident irradiance and temperature on oxygenic photosynthesis and oxygen consumption in a hypersaline cyanobacterial mat from the Ebro Delta, Spain, in which Microcoleus chthonoplastes was the dominant phototrophic organism. The mat was incubated in the laboratory at 15, 20, 25 and 30 degrees C at incident irradiances ranging from 0 to 1,000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1). Oxygen microsensors were used to measure steady-state oxygen profiles and the rates of gross photosynthesis, which allowed the calculation of areal gross photosynthesis, areal net oxygen production, and oxygen consumption in the aphotic layer of the mat. The lowest surface irradiance that resulted in detectable rates of gross photosynthesis increased with increasing temperature from 50 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1) at 15 degrees C to 500 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1) at 30 degrees C. These threshold irradiances were also apparent from the areal rates of net oxygen production and point to the shift of M. chthonoplastes from anoxygenic to oxygenic photosynthesis and stimulation of sulphide production and oxidation rates at elevated temperatures. The rate of net oxygen production per unit area of mat at maximum irradiance, J0, did not change with temperature, whereas, JZphot, the flux of oxygen across the lower boundary of the euphotic zone increased linearly with temperature. The rate of oxygen consumption per volume of aphotic mat increased with temperature. This increase occurred in darkness, but was strongly enhanced at high irradiances, probably as a consequence of increased rates of photosynthate exudation, stimulating respiratory processes in the mat. The compensation irradiance (Ec) marking the change of the mat from a heterotrophic to an autotrophic community, increased exponentially in this range of temperatures.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the influence of yeast invertase gene (inv), with the apoplastic localization of the enzyme, on photosynthesis of potato plants (Solanum tuberosum L., cv. Desiree) grown at various irradiances. Plants were raised in vitro, planted in soil in gauze-insulated stands, and grown at irradiances of 100, 200, and 380 W/m2 of photosynthetically active radiation. Wild-type plants (WT) and the plants transformed with yeast invertase gene (B33-inv) were used. In the beginning of flowering stage, assimilation of 14CO2 and 14C incorporation into photosynthates were measured. Irrespective of irradiance, the carbon assimilation was higher in WT plants, than in transformed B33-inv plants. In the plants studied, we observed divergent light dependences of 14C inclusion into sucrose: the highest labeling was observed at low irradiance in WT plants and at high irradiance in B33-inv transformed plants. The content of 14C incorporated into amino acids changed in the opposite direction compared to 14C incorporation into sucrose. Irrespective of the plant type, similar light dependences were observed for 14C content in the products of glycolate metabolism and in glycerate. At the intermediate irradiance, the patterns of 14C distribution among photosynthetic products showed minimal differences between the plants of two types. The role of apoplast invertase in sugar export from the leaf and the possible control of plant productivity through this enzyme activity are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
To characterize underwater photosynthetic performance in some terrestrial plants, we determined (i) underwater light acclimation (ii) underwater photosynthetic response to dissolved CO2, and (iii) underwater photosynthetic capacity during prolonged submergence in three species that differ in submergence tolerance: Phalaris arundinacea, Rumex crispus (both submergence-tolerant) and Arrhenatherum elatius (submergence-intolerant). None of the species had adjusted to low irradiance after 1 week of submergence. Under non-submerged (control) conditions, only R. crispus displayed shade acclimation. Submergence increased the apparent quantum yield in this species, presumably because of the enhanced CO2 affinity of the elongated leaves. In control plants of the grass species P. arundinacea and A. elatius, CO2 affinities were higher than for R. crispus. The underwater photosynthetic capacity of R. crispus increased during 1 month of submergence. In P. arundinacea photosynthesis remained constant during 1 month of submergence at normal irradiance; at low irradiance a reduction in photosynthetic capacity was observed after 2 weeks, although there was no tissue degeneration. In contrast, underwater photosynthesis of the submergence-intolerant species A. elatius collapsed rapidly under both irradiances, and this was accompanied by leaf decay. To describe photosynthesis versus irradiance curves, four models were evaluated. The hyperbolic tangent produced the best goodness-of-fit, whereas the rectangular hyperbola (Michaelis-Menten model) gave relatively poor results.  相似文献   

11.
In maize (Zea mays L., cv Contessa), nitrogen (NO3) limitation resulted in a reduction in shoot growth and photosynthetic capacity and in an increase in the leaf zeaxanthin contents. Nitrogen deficiency had only a small effect on the quantum yield of CO2 assimilation but a large effect on the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. Linear relationships persisted between the quantum yield of CO2 assimilation and that of photosystem II photochemistry in all circumstances. At high irradiances, large differences in photochemical quenching and nonphotochemical quenching of Chl a fluorescence as well as the ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence (Fv/Fm) were apparent between nitrogen-deficient plants and nitrogen-replete controls, whereas at low irradiances these parameters were comparable in all plants. Light intensity-dependent increases in nonphotochemical quenching were greatest in nitrogen-deficient plants as were the decreases in Fv/Fm ratio. In nitrogen-deficient plants, photochemical quenching decreased with increasing irradiance but remained higher than in controls at high irradiances. Thermal dissipative processes were enhanced as a result of nitrogen deficiency (nonphotochemical quenching was elevated and Fv/Fm was lowered) allowing PSII to remain relatively oxidised even when carbon metabolism was limited via nitrogen limitation.  相似文献   

12.
Some ecophysiological features in sun and shade leaves of tall European beech trees (Fagus sylvatica L.) growing in a natural forest stand were investigated. Quantitative leaf characteristics were followed in the field and under controlled conditions. In the sun leaves significantly higher rates of photosynthesis, photorespiration and dark respiration, and also photosynthetic CO2 fixation capacity, photosynthetic productivity, and saturating, adaptation and compensating irradiances were found. Specific leaf mass, mean leaf area, stomata density and size as well as the chlorophyll content per unit dry mass were also significantly different in both types of the leaves. Higher photosynthetic efficiency in the shade leaves allows them a better utilization of the lower irradiance for carbon dioxide uptake. The importance of these findings for annual carbon gain of the shade tolerant European beech species is also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The photosynthetic behaviour of Dunaliella parva Lerche from the athalassic lagoon of Fuente de Piedra (Málaga, Southern Spain) was studied experimentally at three NaCl concentrations (1, 2 and 3 M), five temperatures (15, 23, 31, 38 and 42°C) and nine different irradiances between 82 and 891 mol m–2 s–1. Results are analyzed to define the best growing conditions for the algae. D. parva shows the highest photosynthetic rates at a NaCl molarity of 2 M, under a moderate light intensity (600 mol m–2 s–1) at 31°C. Above this light intensity a clear photoinhibition of the photosynthesis was found at 2 M and 3 M of NaCl. D. parva is a halotolerant and a thermoresistant species as evidenced by its net photosynthesis rate and positive values of oxygen evolution at 42°C.Two methods for modelling photosynthesis vs. irradiance curves are discussed. The first is a single model, based on third-order polynomial equations, and the second is double model, based on hyperbolical Michaelis-Menten type functions and negative exponential to define photoinhibition.  相似文献   

14.
Several experiments were conducted to understand better the physiological mechanisms underlying growth inhibition of the dinoflagellate Gonyaulax polyedra Stein due to small-scale turbulence shear. To measure photosynthetic 14C uptake, a “phytoplankton wheel” device for rotating cultures in closed bottles was used. Turbulence was quantified biologically in the bottles by comparing growth inhibition with that in cultures with constant shear between a fixed cylinder and an outer concentric rotating cylinder (a stable Couette flow). At saturating irradiances, particulate photosynthesis (Psat) or photosynthesis per unit chlorophyll (PBsat) were not inhibited completely at the highest turbulence level (26.6 rad.s?1), and photosynthesis was less sensitive than growth. Photosynthesis per cell (PCsat) was increased by turbulence. In three experiments on the effects of turbulence on photosynthesis versus irradiance curves, the slope of the curve, α, for particulate photosynthesis at limiting irradiances did not change. Photosynthesis per unit chlorophyll per unit irradiance (αB) decreased at high (but not intermediate) turbulence levels. Photosynthesis per cell per unit irradiance, αC, increased with turbulence, suggesting an increase in photosynthetic efficiency in turbulent cultures. In two of the three experiments, respiration rates increased with turbulence, and in one experiment excretion of photosynthetically fixed 14C was not affected by motion. Ratios of accessory pigments to chlorophyll a did not change with turbulence, but pigments per cell and per dry weight increased with turbulence. These findings suggest little or no disruption of the photosynthetic apparatus. When turbulence was applied for 1 week, β-carotene increased while peridinin and diadinoxanthin decreased, suggesting inhibition of synthesis of these latter pigments by prolonged turbulence. Since cell numbers did not increase or decreased during turbulent 72–h incubations, cell division was inhibited and also the cells were very much enlarged. Increases in αC per cell suggest that, in the sea, photo synthetic metabolism can persist efficiently without cell division during turbulent episodes. After turbulence ceases or reaches low levels again, cells can then divide and blooms may form. Thus, blooms can come or go fairly rapidly in the ocean depending on the degree of wave- and wind-induced turbulence.  相似文献   

15.
Illumination of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) leaves during heat treatment produced either additional injury or protection of photosynthetic apparatus depending on irradiance and the heating dose. Furthermore, illumination of leaves during hyperthermia exerted differential impacts on thermal tolerances of photosynthesis and photosystem II-driven electron transport assessed from the reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP). Measurements with infrared gas analyzer showed that mild heating of leaves in darkness (10 min at 38–40°C) had stronger inhibitory effect on CO2 uptake than heating of leaves exposed to low and moderate complex irradiances (3–30 klx), as well as excessive irradiance (75–100 klx). When the leaves were heated at higher temperatures (42–44°C), the low and moderate irradiances had a protective action, while high-intensity light aggravated the inhibition of photosynthesis. Illumination of leaves with weak light during heat treatment mitigated the impairment of chloroplast ultrastructure, whereas irradiation with high-intensity light (100 klx) destroyed the sensitive population of chloroplasts. The heat-stimulated photoinhibition was stronger for leaf photosynthesis than for DCPIP reduction in chloroplasts isolated from heat-treated leaves. No correlation was observed between the extent of violaxanthin deepoxidation, zeaxanthin accumulation, and the protective effect of light on photosynthetic apparatus during heat treatments.  相似文献   

16.
PGR5 has been reported as an important factor for the activity of the ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport around PSI. To elucidate the role of PGR5 in C(3) photosynthesis, we characterized the photosynthetic electron transport rate (ETR), CO(2) assimilation and growth in the Arabidopsis thaliana pgr5 mutant at various irradiances and with CO(2) regimes. In low-light-grown pgr5, the CO(2) assimilation rate and ETR were similar to the those of the wild type at low irradiance, but decreased at saturating irradiance under photorespiratory conditions as well as non-photorespiratory conditions. Although non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (NPQ) was not induced in the pgr5 mutant under steady-state photosynthesis, we show that it was induced under dark to light transition at low CO(2) concentration. Under low light conditions in air, pgr5 showed the same growth as the wild type, but a significant growth reduction compared with the wild type at >150 mumol photons m(-2) s(-1). This growth impairment was largely suppressed under high CO(2) concentrations. Based on the intercellular CO(2) concentration dependency of CO(2) assimilation, ETR and P700 oxidation measurements, we conclude that reduction of photosynthesis and growth result from (i) ATP deficiency and (ii) inactivation of PSI. We discuss these data in relation to the role of PGR5-dependent regulatory mechanisms in tuning the ATP/NADPH ratio and preventing inactivation of PSI, especially under conditions of high irradiance or enhanced photorespiration.  相似文献   

17.
The photosynthetic capabilities of the fern Pteris cretica var. ouvrardii were analysed by means of the light response curves of CO2 exchange. In control growth conditions (greenhouse, low-light: 20–32 W m?2); photosynthesis was shown to be saturated for low irradiance (20–25 W m?2); the saturating photosynthetic rate, very low as compared to higher plants, was due to an extremely high intracellular resistance. When irradiance during the photosynthesis measurement was higher than 60–80 W m?2, a constant decline of net CO2 exchange as a function of time was observed. When irradiance during growth was enhanced, whether in greenhouse (20–250 W m?2) or controlled (62 W m?2) conditions, the first fronds that had developed in the new condition from the crosier stage exhibited decreased net maximal photosynthesis and a decreased efficiency in low light, but saturating irradiance was unmodified. However, the fronds whose entire differentiation (from meristem) occurred under these moderate irradiances (plants defoliated of all fronds and crosiers at the time of transfer), possessed more efficient photosynthetic characteristics than control plants. Pteris is able to grow under extreme shade conditions (4–8 W m?2); light saturating photosynthesis and efficiency are higher under extreme shade than under control conditions. These adaptive characteristics indicate that Pteris is a well-adapted shade species.  相似文献   

18.
Buoyant cyanobacteria, previously mixed throughout the water column, float to the lake surface and form a surface waterbloom when mixing subsides. At the surface, the cells are exposed to full sunlight, and this abrupt change in photon irradiance may induce photoinhibition; at the same time, temperature rises as well. This study investigated the damaging effects of this increase in temperature as well as the ecologically more relevant combination of both an increased temperature and a high photon irradiance. Analysis of surface blooms with oxygen microelectrodes showed that integrated oxygen contents that are dependent on the balance of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and respiratory oxygen uptake decreased when temperature was raised above the lake temperature. Gross rates of photosynthesis were unaffected by temperatures up to of 35°C; hence, a moderate increase in temperature mainly stimulated oxygen uptake. Preincubation of cells of the cyanobacterium Anabaena flos-aquae (Lyngb.) de Brébisson at temperatures up to 35°C did not affect the subsequent measurement of rates of net photosynthesis. Another 5°C rise in temperature severely damaged the photosynthetic apparatus. Failure to restore net rates of photosynthesis was coupled to a strong quenching of the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, Fv/Fm, that was the result of a rise in Fo. A combination of high temperature and high photon irradiance was more damaging than high temperature alone. In contrast, low photon irradiances offered substantial protection against heat injury of the photosynthetic apparatus. I conclude from this study that because cyanobacteria usually are acclimated to low average irradiance prior to bloom formation, there is a reasonable risk of chronic photoinhibition. The increase in temperature will enhance the photodamage of cells in the top layer of the bloom. Low photon irradiances in subsurface layers will offer protection against heat injury. If the high temperatures extend to the deepest, dark layers of the bloom, damage in those layers is likely to occur.  相似文献   

19.
Kinetics of nitrite uptake and reduction by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells growing phototrophically has been studied by means of progress curves and the Michaelis-Menten integrated equation. Both uptake and reduction processes exhibited hyperbolic saturation kinetics, the nitrite uptake system lacking a diffusion component. Nitrite uptake and reduction showed significant differences in Ks for nitrite at pH 7.5 (1.6 versus 20 micromolar, respectively), optimal pH, activation energy values, and sensitivity toward reagents of sulfhydryl groups. Ks values for nitrite uptake were halved in cells subjected to darkness or to nitrogen-starvation. Nitrate inhibited nitrite uptake by a partially competitive mechanism. The same inhibition pattern was found for nitrite uptake by C. reinhardtii mutant 305 cells incapable of nitrate assimilation. The results demonstrate that C. reinhardtii cells take up nitrite via a highly specific carrier, probably energy-dependent, kinetically responsive to environmental changes, distinguishable from the enzymic nitrite reduction and endowed with an active site for nitrite not usable for nitrate transport.  相似文献   

20.
The photosynthesis‐irradiance response (PE) curve, in which mass‐specific photosynthetic rates are plotted versus irradiance, is commonly used to characterize photoacclimation. The interpretation of PE curves depends critically on the currency in which mass is expressed. Normalizing the light‐limited rate to chl a yields the chl a‐specific initial slope (αchl). This is proportional to the light absorption coefficient (achl), the proportionality factor being the photon efficiency of photosynthesis (φm). Thus, αchl is the product of achl and φm. In microalgae αchl typically shows little (<20%) phenotypic variability because declines of φm under conditions of high‐light stress are accompanied by increases of achl. The variation of αchl among species is dominated by changes in achl due to differences in pigment complement and pigment packaging. In contrast to the microalgae, αchl declines as irradiance increases in the cyanobacteria where phycobiliproteins dominate light absorption because of plasticity in the phycobiliprotein:chl a ratio. By definition, light‐saturated photosynthesis (Pm) is limited by a factor other than the rate of light absorption. Normalizing Pm to organic carbon concentration to obtain PmC allows a direct comparison with growth rates. Within species, PmC is independent of growth irradiance. Among species, PmC covaries with the resource‐saturated growth rate. The chl a:C ratio is a key physiological variable because the appropriate currencies for normalizing light‐limited and light‐saturated photosynthetic rates are, respectively, chl a and carbon. Typically, chl a:C is reduced to about 40% of its maximum value at an irradiance that supports 50% of the species‐specific maximum growth rate and light‐harvesting accessory pigments show similar or greater declines. In the steady state, this down‐regulation of pigment content prevents microalgae and cyanobacteria from maximizing photosynthetic rates throughout the light‐limited region for growth. The reason for down‐regulation of light harvesting, and therefore loss of potential photosynthetic gain at moderately limiting irradiances, is unknown. However, it is clear that maximizing the rate of photosynthetic carbon assimilation is not the only criterion governing photoacclimation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号