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 46 毫秒
1.
Metrosideros polymorpha, a dominant tree species in Hawaiian ecosystems, occupies a wide range of habitats. Complementary field and common-garden studies of M. polymorpha populations were conducted across an altitudinal gradient at two different substrate ages to ascertain if the large phenotypic variation of this species is determined by genetic differences or by phenotypic modifications resulting from environmental conditions. Several characteristics, including ecophysiological behavior and anatomical features, were largely induced by the environment. However, other characteristics, particularly leaf morphology, appeared to be mainly determined by genetic background. Common garden plants exhibited higher average rates of net assimilation (5.8 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1) and higher average stomatal conductance (0.18 mol H2O m−2 s−1) than their field counterparts (3.0 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1, and 0.13 mol H2O m−2 s−1 respectively). Foliar δ13C of most common-garden plants was similar among sites of origin with an average value of −26.9‰. In contrast, mean values of foliar δ13C in field plants increased substantially from −29.5‰ at low elevation to −24.8‰ at high elevation. Leaf mass per unit area increased significantly as a function of elevation in both field and common garden plants; however, the range of values was much narrower in common garden plants (211–308 g m−2 for common garden versus 107–407 g m−2 for field plants). Nitrogen content measured on a leaf area basis in common garden plants ranged from 1.4 g m−2 to 2.4 g m−2 and from 0.8 g m−2 to 2.5 g m−2 in field plants. Photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE) decreased 50% with increasing elevation in field plants and only 20% in plants from young substrates in the common garden. This was a result of higher rates of net CO2 assimilation in the common garden plants. Leaf tissue and cell layer thickness, and degree of leaf pubescence increased significantly with elevation in field plants, whereas in common garden plants, variation with elevation of origin was much narrower, or was entirely absent. Morphological characteristics such as leaf size, petiole length, and internode length decreased with increasing elevation in the field and were retained when grown in the common garden, suggesting a potential genetic basis for these traits. The combination of environmentally induced variability in physiological and anatomical characteristics and genetically determined variation in morphological traits allows Hawaiian M. polymorpha to attain and dominate an extremely wide ecological distribution not observed in other tree species. Received: 12 March 1997 / Accepted: 27 August 1997  相似文献   

2.
Claudia Grimmer  Ewald Komor 《Planta》1999,209(3):275-281
Castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) plants were grown for 5–7 weeks in a controlled environment at 350 μl l−1 or 700 μl l−1 CO2. Carbon assimilation, assimilate deposition, dark respiration and assimilate mobilization were measured in leaves 2, 3 and 4 (counted from the base of the plant), and a balance sheet of carbon input and export was elaborated for both CO2 concentrations. Carbon dioxide assimilation was nearly constant over the illumination period, with only a slight depression occurring at the end of the day in mature source leaves, not in young source leaves. Assimilation was ca. 40% higher at 700 μl l−1 than at 350 μl l−1 CO2. The source leaves increased steadily in weight per unit area during the first 3 weeks, more at 700 μl l−1 than at 350 μl l−1 CO2. On top of an irreversible weight increase, there was a large gain in dry weight during the day, which was reversed during the night. This reversible weight gain was constant over the life time of the leaf and ca. 80% higher at 700 μl l−1 than at 350 μl l−1. Most of it was due to carbohydrates. The carbon content (as a percentage) was not altered by the CO2 treatment. Respiration was 25% higher in high-CO2 plants when based on leaf area, but the same when based on dry weight. The rate of carbon export via the phloem was the same during the daytime in plants grown at 350 μl l−1 and 700 μl l−1 CO2. During the night the low-CO2 plants had only 50% of the daytime export rate, in contrast to the high-CO2 plants which maintained the high export rate. It was concluded that the phloem loading system is saturated during the daytime in both CO2 regimes, whereas during the night the assimilate supply is reduced in plants in the normal CO2 concentration. Two-thirds of the carbon exported from the leaves was permanently incorporated as plant dry matter in the residual plant parts. This “assimilation efficiency” was the same for both CO2 regimes. It is speculated that under 350 μl l−1 CO2 the growing Ricinus plant operates at sink limitation during the day and at source limitation during the night. Received: 2 February 1999 / Accepted: 19 April 1999  相似文献   

3.
 To test the hypothesis that the contribution of phosphoribulokinase (PRK) to the control of photosynthesis changes depending on the light environment of the plant, the response of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) transformed with antisense PRK constructs to irradiance was determined. In plants grown under low irradiance (330 μmol m−2 s−1) steady-state photosynthesis was limited in plants with decreased PRK activity upon exposure to higher irradiance, with a control coefficient of PRK for CO2 assimilation of 0.25 at and above 800 μmol m−2 s−1. The flux control coefficient of PRK for steady-state CO2 assimilation was zero, however, at all irradiances in plant material grown at 800 μmol m−2 s−1 and in plants grown in a glasshouse during mid-summer (alternating shade and sun 300–1600 μmol m−2 s−1). To explain these differences between plants grown under low and high irradiances, Calvin cycle enzyme activities and metabolite content were determined. Activities of PRK and other non-equilibrium Calvin cycle enzymes fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase were twofold higher in plants grown at 800 μmol m−2 s−1 or in the glasshouse than in plants grown at 330 μmol m−2 s−1. Activities of equilibrium enzymes transketolase, aldolase, ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase and isomerase were very similar under all growth irradiances. The flux control coefficient of 0.25 in plants grown at 330 μmol m−2 s−1 can be explained because low ribulose-5-phosphate content in combination with low PRK activity limits the synthesis of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate. This limitation is overcome in high-light-grown plants because of the large relative increase in activities of sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase under these conditions, which facilitates the synthesis of larger amounts of ribulose-5-phosphate. This potential limitation will have maintained evolutionary selection pressure for high concentrations of PRK within the chloroplast. Received: 15 November 1999 / Accepted: 27 January 2000  相似文献   

4.
Maroco JP  Edwards GE  Ku MS 《Planta》1999,210(1):115-125
The effects of elevated CO2 concentrations on the photochemistry, biochemistry and physiology of C4 photosynthesis were studied in maize (Zea mays L.). Plants were grown at ambient (350 μL L−1) or ca. 3 times ambient (1100 μL L−1) CO2 levels under high light conditions in a greenhouse for 30 d. Relative to plants grown at ambient CO2 levels, plants grown under elevated CO2 accumulated ca. 20% more biomass and 23% more leaf area. When measured at the CO2 concentration of growth, mature leaves of high-CO2-grown plants had higher light-saturated rates of photosynthesis (ca. 15%), lower stomatal conductance (71%), higher water-use efficiency (225%) and higher dark respiration rates (100%). High-CO2-grown plants had lower carboxylation efficiencies (23%), measured under limiting CO2, and lower leaf protein contents (22%). Activities of a number of C3 and C4 cycle enzymes decreased on a leaf-area basis in the high-CO2-grown plants by 5–30%, with NADP-malate dehydrogenase exhibiting the greatest decrease. In contrast, activities of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase increased significantly under elevated CO2 condition (8% and 36%, respectively). These data show that the C4 plant maize may benefit from elevated CO2 through acclimation in the capacities of certain photosynthetic enzymes. The increased capacity to synthesize sucrose and starch, and to utilize these end-products of photosynthesis to produce extra energy by respiration, may contribute to the enhanced growth of maize under elevated CO2. Received: 30 April 1999 / Accepted: 17 June 1999  相似文献   

5.
Lolium temulentum L. Ba 3081 was grown hydroponically in air (350 μmol mol−1 CO2) and elevated CO2 (700 μmol mol−1 CO2) at two irradiances (150 and 500 μmol m−2 s−1) for 35 days at which point the plants were harvested. Elevated CO2 did not modify relative growth rate or biomass at either irradiance. Foliar carbon-to-nitrogen ratios were decreased at elevated CO2 and plants had a greater number of shorter tillers, particularly at the lower growth irradiance. Both light-limited and light-saturated rates of photosynthesis were stimulated. The amount of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) protein was increased at elevated CO2, but maximum extractable Rubisco activities were not significantly increased. A pronounced decrease in the Rubisco activation state was found with CO2 enrichment, particularly at the higher growth irradiance. Elevated-CO2-induced changes in leaf carbohydrate composition were small in comparison to those caused by changes in irradiance. No CO2-dependent effects on fructan biosynthesis were observed. Leaf respiration rates were increased by 68% in plants grown with CO2 enrichment and low light. We conclude that high CO2 will only result in increased biomass if total light input favourably increases the photosynthesis-to-respiration ratio. At low irradiances, biomass is more limited by increased rates of respiration than by CO2-induced enhancement of photosynthesis. Received: 23 February 1999 / Accepted: 15 June 1999  相似文献   

6.
The physiological site of ethylene action on CO2 assimilation was investigated in intact plants of Glycine max L., using a whole-plant, open exposure system equipped witha remotely operated single-leaf cuvette. The objective of the study was met by investigating in control and ethylene-treated plants the (a) synchrony in response of CO2 assimilation, stomatal conductance to water vapor, and substomatal CO2 partial pressure; (b) response of CO2 assimilation as a function of a range of substomatal CO2 partial pressures; and (c) response of CO2 assimilation as a function of a range of photon flux densities. After exposure to 410 micromoles per cubic meter of ethylene for 2.0 hours, CO2 assimilation and stomatal conductance declined in synchrony, while substomatal CO2 partial pressure remained unchanged until exposure times equaled and exceeded 3.0 hours. Because incipient changes in CO2 assimilation occurred without a change in the CO2 partial pressure in the leaf interior, it is concluded that both stomatal physiology and the chloroplast's CO2 assimilatory capacity were initial sites of ethylene action. After 3.5 hours the effect of ethylene on stomatal conductance and CO2 assimilation exhibited saturation kinetics, and the effect was substantially more pronounced for stomatal conductance than for CO2 assimilation. Based on the response of CO2 assimilation to a range of substomatal CO2 partial pressures, ethylene did not affect either the CO2 compensation point or carboxylation efficiency at subsaturating CO2 partial pressures. Above-ambient supplies of CO2 did not alleviate the diminished rates of CO2 assimilation. In partitioning the limitations imposed on CO2 assimilation in control and ethylene-treated plants, the stomatal component accounted for only 16 and 4%, respectively. The response of CO2 assimilation to a range of photon flux densities suggests that ethylene reduced apparent quantum yield by nearly 50%. Thus, the pronounced decline in net photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in the presence of ethylene was due more to a loss in the mesophyll tissue's intrinsic capacity to assimilate CO2 than to a reduction in stomatal conductance.  相似文献   

7.
In three tropical rain forest light environments in Sabah, Malaysia, we compared photosynthesis in seedlings of ten climax tree species with putatively differing shade tolerances. The objectives of the study were (a) to characterise the range of photosynthetic responses in ten species of the Dipterocarpaceae and (b) to elucidate those photosynthetic characteristics that might provide a basis for niche partitioning. Seedlings were acclimated (c. 7 months) in three light environments; understorey, partial shade and a gap (140 m2). The light environments represented a gradation in median diurnal (0630–1830 hours) photon flux density (PFD) ranging from understorey (4.7 μmol m−2 s−1), through partial shade (21.2 μmol m−2 s−1) to gap (113.7 μmol m−2 s−1). Integrated diurnal PFD were in the sequence gap > partial shade > understorey (15.2, 4.7, 1.3 mol m−2 day−1, respectively). In gap-acclimated plants, species differed in the photosynthetic light-response variables apparent quantum yield, dark respiration rate, light compensation point, net saturated leaf assimilation rate (A sat), and in stomatal conductance (g s sat) when assimilation rate (A) was saturated. A light-demanding pioneer species (Macaranga hypoleuca) and a shade-demanding understorey species (Begonia sp.) had, respectively, higher and lower A sat and g s sat than the dipterocarp species. In high-light conditions A sat and g s sat were strongly positively correlated in dipterocarp species. Differing photosynthetic characteristics of gap-acclimated plants suggest that, in these dipterocarp species, different rates of carbon fixation may be an important factor contributing towards niche partitioning. Mean integrated diurnal A (A diurnal) in the gap, partial shade and understory were, respectively, 122.9, 52.7, 20.5 mmol m−2 day−1. Differences occurred in A diurnal of dipterocarp species between light environments. When Macaranga was included, differences in A diurnal were evident in the gap and partial shade, and in both cases were attributed to the pioneer. For the variable A diurnal, there was of a shift in the rank position of Macaranga among light environments, but a shift did not occur among the dipterocarp species. Results from this study are consistent with the idea that rates of carbon fixation per unit leaf area may contribute towards niche differentiation between the climax and single pioneer species, but not within the group of climax species. Other physiological and/or carbon allocation factors may be involved in any niche partitioning; dipterocarp species often have inherently different growth rates and susceptibility to herbivory. As an alternative to niche partitioning, dipterocarp species may co-exist in natural light environments as a result of habitat disequilibrium or purely stochastic processes. Received: 2 April 1997 / Accepted: 13 July 1997  相似文献   

8.
Baryla A  Carrier P  Franck F  Coulomb C  Sahut C  Havaux M 《Planta》2001,212(5-6):696-709
Brassica napus L. (oilseed rape) was grown from seeds on a reconstituted soil contaminated with cadmium (100 mg Cd kg−1 dry soil), resulting in a marked chlorosis of the leaves which was investigated using a combination of biochemical, biophysical and physiological methods. Spectroscopic and chromatographic analyses of the photosynthetic pigments indicated that chlorosis was not due to a direct interaction of Cd with the chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway. In addition, mineral deficiency and oxidative stress were apparently not involved in the pigment loss. Leaf chlorosis was attributable to a marked decrease in the chloroplast density caused by a reduction in the number of chloroplasts per cell and a change in cell size, suggesting that Cd interfered with chloroplast replication and cell division. Relatively little Cd was found in the chloroplasts and the properties of the photosynthetic apparatus (electron transport, protein composition, chlorophyll antenna size, chloroplast ultrastructure) were not affected appreciably in plants grown on Cd-polluted soil. Depth profiling of photosynthetic pigments by phase-resolved photoacoustic spectroscopy revealed that the Cd-induced decrease in pigment content was very pronounced at the leaf surface (stomatal guard cells) compared to the leaf interior (mesophyll). This observation was consistent with light transmission and fluorescence microscopy analyses, which revealed that stomata density in the epidermis was noticeably reduced in Cd-exposed leaves. Concomitantly, the stomatal conductance estimated from gas-exchange measurements was strongly reduced with Cd. When plants were grown in a high-CO2 atmosphere (4,000 μl CO2 l−1), the inhibitory effect of Cd on growth was not cancelled, suggesting that the reduced availability of CO2 at the chloroplast level associated with the low stomatal conductance was not the main component of Cd toxicity in oilseed rape. Received: 14 July 2000 / Accepted: 27 August 2000  相似文献   

9.
The appearance of transverse sections of maize leaves indicates the existence of two airspace systems serving the mesophyll, one connected to the stomata of the upper epidermis and the other to the stomata of the lower surface, with few or no connections between the two. This study tests the hypothesis that the air-space systems of the upper and lower mesophyll are separated by a defined barrier of measurable conductance. A mathematical procedure, based on this hypothesis, is developed for the quantitative separation of the contributions made by the upper and lower halves of the mesophyll to carbon assimilation using gasexchange data. Serial paradermal sections and three-dimensional scanning-electron-microscope images confirmed the hypothesis that there were few connections between the two air-systems. Simultaneous measurements of nitrous-oxide diffusion across the leaf and of transpiration from the two surfaces showed that the internal conductance was about 15% of the maximum observed stomatal conductance. This demonstrates that the poor air-space connections, indicated by microscopy, represent a substantial barrier to gas diffusion. By measuring the CO2 and water-vapour fluxes from each surface independently, the intercellular CO2 concentration (c i) of each internal air-space system was determined and the flux between them calculated. This allowed correction of the apparent CO2 uptake at each surface to derive the true CO2 uptake by the mesophyll cells of the upper and lower halves of the leaf. This approach was used to analyse the contribution of the upper and lower mesophyll to CO2 uptake by the leaf as a whole in response to varying light levels incident on the upper leaf surface. This showed that the upper mesophyll was light-saturated by a photon flux of approx. 1000 mol·m-2·s-1 (i.e. about one-half of full sunlight). The lower mesophyll was not fully saturated by photon fluxes of nearly double full sunlight. At low photon fluxes the c i of the upper mesophyll was significantly less than that of the lower mesophyll, generating a significant upward flux of CO2. At light levels equivalent to full sunlight, and above, c i did not differ significantly between the two air space systems. The physiological importance of the separation of the air-space systems of the upper and lower mesophyll to gas exchange is discussed.Abbreviations and symbols A net leaf CO2 uptake rate - A upper app. and A lower app. net rates of CO2 uptake across the upper and lower surfaces - A upper and A lower derived net rates of CO2 uptake by the upper and lower mesophyll - A upward net flux of CO2 from the lower to upper mesophyll - c a, c a, upper and c a, lower the CO2 concentrations in the air around the leaf above the upper surface and below the lower surface - c N2O the concentration of N2O in the air around the leaf - c i, c i, upper and c i, lower the mesophyll intercellular CO2 concentration of the whole leaf, the upper mesophyll and the lower mesophyll - g i leaf internal conductance to CO2 - g s, g s, lower and g s, upper the stomatal conductance of the whole leaf, the lower surface and the upper surface - g the total conductance across the leaf - Q the photosynthetically active photon flux density  相似文献   

10.
M. Tretiach  A. Geletti 《Oecologia》1997,111(4):515-522
CO2 exchange of the endolithic lichen Verrucaria baldensis was measured in the laboratory under different conditions of water content, temperature, light, and CO2 concentration. The species had low CO2 exchange rates (maximum net photosynthesis: c. 0.45 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1; maximum dark respiration: c. 0.3 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1) and a very low light compensation point (7 μmol photons m−2 s−1 at 8°C). The net photosynthesis/respiration quotient reached a maximum at 9–15°C. Photosynthetic activity was affected only after very severe desiccation, when high resaturation respiratory rates were measured. Microclimatic data were recorded under different weather conditions in an abyss of the Trieste Karst (northeast Italy), where the species was particularly abundant. Low photosynthetically active radiation (normally below 40 μmol photons m−2 s−1), very high humidities (over 80%), and low, constant temperatures were measured. Thallus water contents sufficient for CO2 assimilation were often measured in the absence of condensation phenomena. Received: 22 September 1996 / Accepted: 26 April 1997  相似文献   

11.
 Drought effects on leaf photosynthesis of A. germinans growing under two contrasting salinities were studied in a Venezuelan fringe mangrove. During both wet and dry seasons, severe chronic-photoinhibition at predawn was not observed but strong down regulation occurred at midday during both seasons. Carbon assimilation rates (A, μmol CO2 m−2 s−1) declined during the dry season from 11.9±1.8 to 7.0±1.5 and from 9.6±2.0 to 4.7±2.5 in plants from low and high salinity sites, respectively. Changes in carbon assimilation per unit of chlorophyll (A/Chl, mmol CO2 mol−1 Chl) were from 31.6±4.7 to 20.5±4.3 and from 21.9±4.7 to 15.2±8.2 in the low and high salinity plants, respectively. Therefore, neither changes in Chl nor seasonal differences in photoprotective down regulation could account fully for the decrease in leaf photosynthesis during drought. A reduction in CO2 diffusion due to lowered stomatal conductance was not large enough to explain such a dramatic effect of drought on leaf photosynthesis. Stomatal response could be mitigated by the capability of A. germinans for osmotic adjustment under high salinity and/or drought. However, this intracellular salt accumulation may reduce carbon assimilation capacity further by decreasing the metabolism of leaf cells, increasing dark respiration and/or photorespiration. Received: 10 June 1998 / Accepted: 5 October 1998  相似文献   

12.
Acclimation to elevated CO2 was investigated in Parmelia caperata originating from the vicinity of a natural CO2 spring, where the average daytime CO2 concentration was 729 ± 39 μmol mol−1 dry air. Thalli showed no evidence of a down-regulation in photosynthetic capacity following long-term exposure to CO2 enrichment in the field; carboxylation efficiency, total Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) content, apparent quantum yield of CO2 assimilation, and the light-saturated rate of CO2 assimilation (measured under ambient and saturating CO2 concentrations) were similar in thalli from the naturally CO2 enriched site and an adjacent control site where the average long-term CO2 concentration was about 355 μmol mol−1. Thalli from both CO2 environments exhibited low CO2 compensation points and early saturation of CO2 uptake kinetics in response to increasing external CO2 concentrations, suggesting the presence of an active carbon-concentrating mechanism. Consistent with the lack of significant effects on photosynthetic metabolism, no changes were found in the nitrogen content of thalli following prolonged exposure to elevated CO2. Detailed intrathalline analysis revealed a decreased investment of nitrogen in Rubisco in the pyrenoid of algae located in the elongation zone of thalli originating from elevated CO2, an effect associated with a reduction in the percentage of the cell volume occupied by lipid bodies and starch grains. Although these differences did not affect the photosynthetic capacity of thalli, there was evidence of enhanced limitations to CO2 assimilation in lichens originating from the CO2-enriched site. The light-saturated rate of CO2 assimilation measured at the average growth CO2 concentration was found to be significantly lower in thalli originating from a CO2-enriched atmosphere compared with that of thalli originating and measured at ambient CO2. At lower photosynthetic photon flux densities, the light compensation point of net CO2 assimilation was significantly higher in thalli originating from elevated CO2, and this effect was associated with higher usnic acid content. Received: 8 May 1998 / Accepted: 22 January 1999  相似文献   

13.
Rate of net CO2 assimilation by soil-grown soybean plants were studied over a range of relative leaf water contents at each of four levels of irradiance. There was a large interaction between light level and leaf water deficit on the rate of CO2 assimilation. The effect of leaf water deficit on assimilation became larger as irradiance increased. Both stomatal resistance to CO2 transport and mesophyll resistance to CO2 assimilation increased as leaf-water deficit increased. The increase in both resistance with changing leaf-water content was largest at high irradiance and became smaller as irradiance decreased. Relief of soil-moisture stress by watering induced large oscillations of CO2 assimilation, stomatal resistance, and mesophyll resistance. The oscillation of the mesophyll resistance occurred in the absence of changes in relative water content and appeared to be related to oscillations in leaf temperature. The observed increase in mesophyll resistance with decreasing leaf-water content under nonoscillative conditions may be caused by changes in leaf temperature rather than leaf water content.  相似文献   

14.
 The physiological properties of transgenic tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum L.) with decreased or increased transport capacities of the chloroplast triose phosphate/phosphate translocator (TPT) were compared in order to investigate the extent to which the TPT controls metabolic fluxes in wild-type tobacco. For this purpose, tobacco lines with an antisense repression of the endogenous TPT (αTPT) and tobacco lines overexpressing the TPT gene isolated from the C4 plant Flaveria trinervia (FtTPT) were used. The F. trinervia TPT expressed in yeast cells exhibited transport characteristics identical to the TPT from C3 plants. Neither antisense TPT plants nor FtTPT overexpressors showed a phenotype when grown in a greenhouse in air. Contents of starch and soluble sugars in upper source leaves were similar in TPT underexpressors and FtTPT overexpressors compared to the wild type at the end of the photoperiod. The FtTPT overexpressors incorporated more 14CO2 in sucrose than the wild type, indicating that the TPT limits sucrose biosynthesis in the wild type. There were only small effects on labelling of amino acids and organic acids. The mobilisation of starch was enhanced in αTPT lines but decreased in FtTPT overexpressors compared to the wild type. Enzymes involved in starch mobilisation or utilisation, such as α-amylase or hexokinase were increased in αTPT plants and, in the case of amylases, decreased in FtTPT overexpressors. Moreover, α-amylase activity exhibited a pronounced diurnal variation in αTPT lines with a maximum activity after 8 h in the light. These changes in starch hydrolytic activities were confirmed by activity staining of native gels. Activities of glucan phosphorylases were unaffected by either a decrease or an increase in TPT activity. There were also effects of TPT activities on steady-state levels of phosphorylated intermediates as well as total amino acids and malate. In air, there was no or little effect of altered TPT transport activity on either rates of photosynthetic electron transport and/or CO2 assimilation. However, in elevated CO2 (1500 μl · l−1) and low O2 (2%) the rate of CO2 assimilation was decreased in the αTPT lines and was slightly higher in FtTPT lines. This shows that the TPT limits maximum rates of photosynthesis in the wild type. Received: 26 March 1999 / Accepted: 21 August 1999  相似文献   

15.
16.
The effects of temperature on photosynthesis of a rosette plant growing at ground level, Acaena cylindrostachya R. et P., and an herb that grows 20–50 cm above ground level, Senecio formosus H.B.K., were studied along an altitudinal gradient in the Venezuelan Andes. These species were chosen in order to determine – in the field and in the laboratory – how differences in leaf temperature, determined by plant form and microenvironmental conditions, affect their photosynthetic capacity. CO2 assimilation rates (A) for both species decreased with increasing altitude. For Acaena leaves at 2900 m, A reached maximum values above 9 μmol m−2 s−1, nearly twice as high as maximum A found at 3550 m (5.2) or at 4200 m (3.9). For Senecio leaves, maximum rates of CO2 uptake were 7.5, 5.8 and 3.6 μmol m−2 s−1 for plants at 2900, 3550 and 4200 m, respectively. Net photosynthesis-leaf temperature relations showed differences in optimum temperature for photosynthesis (A o.t.) for both species along the altitudinal gradient. Acaena showed similar A o.t. for the two lower altitudes, with 19.1°C at 2900 m and 19.6°C at 3550 m, while it increased to 21.7°C at 4200 m. Maximum A for this species at each altitude was similar, between 5.5 and 6.0 μmol m−2 s−1. For the taller Senecio, A o.t. was more closely related to air temperatures and decreased from 21.7°C at 2900 m, to 19.7°C at 3550 m and 15.5°C at 4200 m. In this species, maximum A was lower with increasing altitude (from 6.0 at 2900 m to 3.5 μmol m−2 s−1 at 4200 m). High temperature compensation points for Acaena were similar at the three altitudes, c. 35°C, but varied in Senecio from 37°C at 2900 m, to 39°C at 3550 m and 28°C at 4200 m. Our results show how photosynthetic characteristics change along the altitudinal gradient for two morphologically contrasting species influenced by soil or air temperatures. Received: 5 July 1997 / Accepted: 25 October 1997  相似文献   

17.
Microstegium vimineum (Trin.) A. Camus, a shade-tolerant C4 grass, has spread throughout the eastern United States since its introduction in 1919. This species invades disturbed understory habitats along streambanks and surrounding mesic forests, and has become a major pest in areas such as Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The focus of this study was to characterize the photosynthetic induction responses of M. vimineum, specifically its ability to utilize low light and sunflecks, two factors that may be critical to invasive abilities and survival in the understory. In addition, we were curious about the ability of a grass with the C4 photosynthetic pathway to respond to sunflecks. Plants were grown under 25% and 50% ambient sunlight, and photosynthetic responses to both steady-state and variable light were determined. Plants grown in both 25% and 50% ambient sun became 90% light saturated between 750–850 μmol m−2 s−1; however, plants grown in 50% ambient sun had significantly higher maximum steady-state photosynthetic rates (16.09 ± 1.37 μmol m−2 s−1 vs. 12.71 ± 1.18 μmol m−2 s−1). Both groups of plants induced to 50% of the steady-state rate in 3–5 min, while it took 10–13 min to reach 90% of maximum rates, under both flashing and steady-state light. For both groups of plants, stomatal conductance during induction reached maximum rates in 6–7 min, after which rates decreased slightly. Upon return to low light, rates of induction loss and stomatal closure were very rapid in both groups of plants, but were more rapid in those grown in high light. Rapid induction and the ability to induce under flashing light may enable this species to invade and dominate mesic understory habitats, while rapid induction loss due to stomatal closure may prevent excess water loss when low light constrains photosynthesis. The C4 pathway itself does not appear to present an insurmountable barrier to the ability of this grass species to respond to sunflecks in an understory environment. Received: 21 February 1997 / Accepted: 10 October 1997  相似文献   

18.
Increasing photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) received during development from 5.5 to 31.2 mol m-2 d-1 resulted in greater leaf and mesophyll cell surface areas in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). The relationships between the amounts of these surface areas and potential CO2 assimilation by these leaves were evaluated. Leaf area (epidermal surface area of one side of a leaf), mesophyll cell surface area, and net rate of CO2 uptake (Pn) were measured from the time leaves first unfolded until P., was substantially reduced. At the higher PPFD, leaf and mesophyll surface areas increased more rapidly during expansion, and Pn per unit leaf area was greater than at the lower PPFD. Although leaves at the higher PPFD reached the maximum P., per unit mesophyll cell surface area 4 to 5 days earlier than leaves at the lower PPFD, the maxima for these P., were similar. Leaves grown at the higher PPFD had the potential to assimilate 2.2, 3.5, or 5.8 times the amount of CO2 as leaves from the lower PPFD when P., was expressed per unit mesophyll surface, per unit leaf surface, or per whole leaf, respectively. Greater and earlier development of both P., and mesophyll cell surface area at higher PPFD apparently had a compounding effect on the potential for carbon assimilation by a leaf.  相似文献   

19.
Two approaches to determine the fraction (μ) of mitochondrial respiration sustained during illumination by measuring CO2 gas exchange are compared. In single leaves, the respiration rate in the light (`day respiration' rate Rd) is determined as the ordinate of the intersection point of A–ci curves at various photon flux densities and compared with the CO2 evolution rate in darkness (`night respiration' rate Rn). Alternatively, using leaves with varying values of CO2 compensation concentration (Γ), intracellular resistance (ri) and Rn, an average number for μ can be derived from the linear regression between Γ and the product riċRn. Both methods also result in a number c* for that intercellular CO2 concentration at which net CO2 uptake rate is equal to –Rd. c* is an approximate value of the photocompensation point Γ* (Γ in the absence of mitochondrial respiration), which is related to the CO2/O2 specificity factor of Rubisco Sc/o. The presuppositions and limitations for application of both approaches are discussed. In leaves of Nicotiana tabacum, at 22 °C, single leaf measurements resulted in mean values of μ = 0.71 and c* = 34 μmol mol−1. At the photosynthetically active photon flux density of 960 μmol quanta m−2 s−1, nearly the same numbers were derived from the linear relationship between Γ and riċRn. c* and Rd determined by single leaf measurements varied between 31 and 41 μmol mol−1 and between 0.37 and 1.22 μmol m−2 s−1, respectively. A highly significant negative correlation between c* and Rd was found. From the regression equation we obtained estimates for Γ* (39 μmol mol−1), Sc/o (96.5 mol mol−1) and the mesophyll CO2 transfer resistance (7.0 mol−1 m2 s). This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Leaf carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) and photosynthetic gas exchange were measured on plants growing in hanging garden communities in southern Utah, USA. Hanging gardens are unusual, mesic cliff communities occurring where water seeps from the sandstone bedrock in an otherwise extremely arid region; there is very limited overlap in species distributions inside and outside these gardens. Solar exposure in hanging gardens varied with orientation and one of the gardens (Ribbon Garden) was shaded throughout the day. The leaf δ13C values of plants in hanging gardens were significantly more negative than for plants from either nearby ephemeral wash or riparian communities. In Ribbon Garden, the observed δ13C values were as low as −34.8‰, placing them among the most negative values reported for any terrestrial plant species growing in a natural environment. Hanging garden plants were exposed to normal atmospheric CO2 with an average δ13C value of −7.9‰ and so the low leaf δ13C values could not be attributed to exposure to a CO2 source with low 13C content. There was a seasonal change toward more negative leaf δ13C values at the end of the growing season. The observed leaf δ13C values were consistent with photosynthetic gas exchange measurements that indicated unusually high leaf intercellular CO2 concentrations associated with the relatively low light levels in hanging gardens. Thus, extremely negative leaf δ13C values would be expected if significant amounts of the seasonal carbon gain occur at light levels low enough to be near the light compensation point. Maximum observed photosynthetic rates varied with light levels at each of the gardens, with maximum rates averaging 20.3, 14.6, and 3.1 μmol m−2 s−1 at Double Garden, Lost Garden, and Ribbon Garden, respectively. Leaf nitrogen contents averaged 18.5 mg g−1 in species from the more shaded hanging gardens (Lost and Ribbon). When expressed on a leaf area basis, nitrogen contents averaged 117 mmol N m−2 at Lost Garden and 65 mmol N m−2 at Ribbon Garden (shadiest of the two gardens). Leaf nitrogen isotope ratios averaged −2.3‰ (range of −0.7 to −6.1‰), suggesting that most of the nitrogen was derived from a biological fixation source which is most likely the Nostoc growing on the sandstone walls at the seep. These values contrast with leaf nitrogen isotope ratios of 5–9‰ which have been previously reported for arid zone plants in nearby ecosystems. Received: 19 January 1997 / Accepted: 19 April 1997  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