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1.
Summary

δ13C measurements were made of dissolved inorganic C, and of submerged benthic cyanobacteria, algae and bryophytes, from Allt Meall nan Damh, a burn at Ardeonaig, Perthshire. The δ13C of the CO2, HCO3/- and CO3/2- components of the inorganic C were computed, and the Δ values of the organic C in the photolithotrophs were then calculated relative to dissolved CO2. The decreasing order of A values in the Ardeonaig Burn is Lemanea and bryophytes ≥ green macroalgae and Audouinella > diatom mats, which is the same as in the Dighty Burn. However, the Δ values of Lemanea and the bryophytes, which depend on diffusive CO2 entry, are lower at Ardeonaig than in the Dighty Burn, suggesting greater diffusive limitation to photosynthesis in the Ardeonaig Burn. It is not easy to relate this difference in Δ values in Lemanea to the higher C:N atomic ratio in the Ardeonaig Burn (21.2 ± 0.64) than in the Dighty Burn (9.5–11.0). The Δ values relative to HCO3/- for the HCO3/--using diatom mat in the Ardeonaig Burn is also lower than that in the Dighty Burn; this is consistent with a greater diffusion limitation of photosynthesis in the thicker mats in the Ardeonaig Burn. The δ13C of a Lyngbya mat overlying a Lemanea population stranded by low summer water levels indicates that some of the C fixed by the HCO3/--using Lyngbya comes from respiration of low-δ13C inorganic C by the Lemanea which is shaded by the Lyngbya. The δ13C values of Mesotaenium in its mucilage sheath on a thinly vegetated bank is suggestive of predominant use of the higher CO2 concentrations with lower δ13C from groundwater rather than of atmospheric CO2 yielding lower dissolved CO2 concentrations with a higher δ13C value.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The inorganic carbon fixation patterns of Isoetes lacustris and Lobelia dortmanna from an oligotrophic Scottish loch have been examined by following titratable acidity changes in plant sap and light/dark 14CO2 incorporation by roots and shoots. The diurnal pattern of titratable acidity changes in I. lacustris suggests crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) while the lack of any change in titratable acidity in L. dortmanna suggests C3 metabolism. Of the carbon fixed by L. dortmanna, 99.9% was taken up through the roots and fixation occurred primarily during the day. In Isoetes, CO2 was taken up by both roots and shoots and during both day and night. Regardless of the site of CO2 uptake, fixation occurred only in the shoots of both plants. Analysis of carbon isotope ratios of plant organic material was used to further investigate the photosynthetic mechanisms of these Isoetids. Considering the absence of a nighttime peak in titratable acidity in L. dortmanna, the 13C (=13C plant-13C source) value of the shoots of L. dortmanna (-14.2) is indicative of C3 photosynthesis limited by the rate of CO2 diffusion. The less negative of I. lacustris (-6.0) is consistent with both dark acidification of CAM and CO2 limited C3 photosynthesis. This is in contrast to the terrestrial Isoetes durieui which is shown to have a value which is similar to a terrestrial C3 plant. The carbon fixation patterns of these Isoetids suggest that the CO2 concentration in the loch may be growth limiting, and that root uptake and/or dark acidification are means of optimising CO2 supply. However, in view of the relatively high levels of CO2 in sediment and bulk water, it is suggested that low levels of nutrients may also limit growth in these plants.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Elodea canadensis grows over a wide range of inorganic carbon, nutrient, and light conditions in lakes and streams. Affinity for HCO 3 - use during photosynthesis ranged from strong to weak in Elodea collected from seven localities with different HCO 3 - and CO2 concentrations. The response to HCO 3 - was also very plastic in plants grown in the laboratory at high HCO 3 - concentrations and CO2 concentrations varying from 14.8 to 2,200 M. Bicarbonate affinity was markedly reduced with increasing CO2 concentrations in the growth medium so that ultimately HCO 3 - use was not detectable. High CO2 concentrations also decreased CO2 affinity and induced high CO2 compensation points (360M CO2) and tenfold higher half-saturation values (800 M CO2).The variable HCO 3 - affinity is probably environmentally based. Elodea is a recently introduced species in Denmark, where it reproduces only vegetatively, leaving little opportunity for genetic variation. More important, local populations in the same water system had different HCO 3 - affinities, and a similar variation was created by exposing one plant collection to different laboratory conditions.Bicarbonate use enabled Elodea to photosynthesize rapidly in waters of high alkalinity and enhanced the carbon-extracting capacity by maintaining photosynthesis above pH 10. On the other hand, use of HCO 3 - represents an investment in transport apparatus and energy which is probably not profitable when CO2 is high and HCO 3 - is low. This explanation is supported by the findings that HCO 3 - affinity was low in field populations where HCO 3 - was low (0.5 and 0.9 m M) or CO2 was locally high, and that HCO 3 - affinity was suppressed in the laboratory by high CO2 concentrations.Abbreviations DIC dissolved inorganic carbon (CO2+ HCO 3 - +CO 3 - ) - CO2 compensation point - K 1/2 apparent halfsaturation constant - PHCO 3 interpolated photosynthesis in pure HCO 3 - and zero CO2 - Pmax photosynthetic rate under carbon and light saturation  相似文献   

4.
Kübler  Janet E.  Raven  John A. 《Hydrobiologia》1996,326(1):401-406
Palmaria palmata, which is able to use HCO inf3 sup– as a carbon source for photosynthesis, and Lomentaria articulata, which is dependent on diffusive uptake of dissolved CO2, were grown under constant light and light with sunflecks designed to model wave-induced fluctuations of near-shore underwater light. Both species exhibited significantly increased stable carbon isotope discrimination (more negative values of 13C relative to PDB) when grown with sunflecks. More negative 13C values were associated with decreased growth rate of P. palmata but not of L. articulata. The contrasting effects of sunflecks on the carbon-use characteristics of the two species are discussed in terms of the energetic cost of HCO inf3 sup– use and the susceptibility of CO2 diffusion-dependent species to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

5.
Summary An attempt has been made to evaluate the contribution of soil respired CO2 to the total assimilation of a forest tree, by heeding the 13C-concentrations of CO2 from the free atmosphere and from mineralization processes within the soil respectively. An expression has been derived, according to which the assimilated fraction of CO2 from the soil at a particular height of a tree is given by the 13C-value of the corresponding leaves, 13C of atmospheric CO2, 13C of soil respired CO2 and the physiological state of the leaves expressed as the ratio of total respiration over gross photosynthesis and internal over external CO2-concentration. In the particular case investigated, a 13C-difference of 5 has been determined from bottom to top of a beech tree which results in a CO2 contribution from the soil of about 22% for the lower forest strata, while the total contribution of soil respired CO2 accounts for about 5% of the overall assimilation.  相似文献   

6.
We describe the direct observation of very weak side chain–main chain hydrogen bonding interactions in medium-size 13C/15N-labeled proteins with sensitivity-enhanced NMR spectroscopy. Specifically, the remote correlation between the hydrogen acceptor side chain carboxylate carbon 13CO2 of glutamate 54 and the hydrogen donor backbone amide 15N of methionine 49 in a 12 kDa protein, human FKBP12, is detected via the trans-hydrogen bond 3h J NCO2 coupling by employing a novel sensitivity-enhanced HNCO-type experiment, CPD-HNCO. The 3h J NCO2 coupling constant appears to be even smaller than the average value of backbone 3h J NC couplings, consistent with more extensive local dynamics in protein side chains.  相似文献   

7.
Hans Schnyder 《Planta》1992,187(1):128-135
A photosynthate labelling method is presented which takes advantage of the natural difference in carbon-isotope composition () which exists between atmospheric CO2 (-8) and commercially available compressed CO2. Carbon dioxide with -4.0 and –27.9%., respectively, has been used for labelling. A plant growth cabinet served as the labelling compartment. CO2-free air was continuously injected at a rate of up to 54m3·h–1. Dilution of cabinet CO2 by CO2-free air was counterbalanced by addition of CO2 with known constant . Since the labelling-cabinet atmosphere was continuously exchanged at a high rate, photosynthetic carbon-isotope discrimination was fully expressed. In order to study the distribution of carbon acquired by the plant during a defined growth period, the of CO2 was modified by replacing, for example, atmospheric CO2 by CO2 with –27.9%. and the weight and 5 of plant carbon pools was monitored over time. In such an experiment the change of CO2 was followed by a rapid change of the of sucrose in mature flag-leaf blades of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). The 5 of sucrose stabilized near –51%., indicating complete exchange by current photosynthate. In contrast 83% of the total carbon in mature flag-leaf blades was not exchanged after 14 d continuous labelling. Differential labelling of pre- and post-anthesis photosynthate indicated that 13% of grain carbon originated from pre-anthesis photosynthesis. Carbon-isotope discrimination and its consideration in experimentation and labelling data evaluation are discussed in detail. Since the air supplied to the labelling cabinet is dry and free of CO2, carbon-isotope discrimination and carbon turnover and partitioning can be studied over a wide range of CO2 concentrations (0–2600 cm3 · m–3) and vapor-pressure deficits.Abbreviation and Symbol PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - carbon-isotope composition Dr. G. Schleser (Forschungszentrum Jülich, FRG) and Professor S. Hoernes (Mineralogisch-Petrologisches Institut, Universität Bonn) for valuable help and advice during the initial stages of the project and Professor W. Kühbauch (Institut für Pflanzenbau, Universität Bonn) for continuing support. Technical assistance of Ute Labusch, Petra Biermann, Ludwig Schmitz and Thomas Gebbing is gratefully acknowleged.
  相似文献   

8.
Ekblad  Alf  Högberg  Peter 《Plant and Soil》2000,219(1-2):197-209
The main aim of this study was to test various hypotheses regarding the changes in 13C of emitted CO2 that follow the addition of C4-sucrose to the soil of a C3-ecosystem. It forms part of an experimental series designed to assess whether or not the contributions from C3-respiration (root and microbial) and C4-respiration (microbial) to total soil respiration can be calculated from such changes. A series of five experiments, three on sieved (root-free) mor-layer material, and two in the field with intact mor-layer (and consequently with active roots), were performed. Both in the experiments on sieved mor-layer and the field experiments, we found a C4-sucrose-induced increase in C3-respiration that accounted for between 30% and 40% of the respiration increase 1 h after sucrose addition. When the course of C3-, C4- and total respiration was followed in sieved material over four days following addition of C4-sucrose, the initially increased respiration of C3-C was transient, passing within less than 24 h. In a separate pot experiment, neither ectomycorrhizal Pinus sylvestrisL. roots nor non-mycorrhizal roots of this species showed respiratory changes in response to exogenous sucrose. No shift in the 13C of the evolved CO2 after adding C3-sucrose to sieved mor-layer material was found, confirming that the sucrose-induced increase in respiration of endogenous C was not an artefact of discrimination against 13C during respiration. Furthermore, we conclude that the C4-sucrose induced transient increase in C3-respiration is most likely the result of accelerated turnover of C in the microbial biomass. Thus, neither respiration of mycorrhizal roots, nor processes discriminating against 13C were likely sources of error in the field. The estimated 13C of evolved soil CO2 in three field experiments lay between –25.2 and –23.6. The study shows that we can distinguish between CO2 evolved from microbial mineralisation of added C4-sucrose, and CO2 evolved from endogenous carbon sources (roots and microbial respiration).  相似文献   

9.
The acquisition of inorganic carbon by four red macroalgae   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Photosynthesis was studied in four species of red marine macroalgae: Palmaria palmata, Laurencia pinnatifida, Lomentaria articulata and Delesseria sanguinea. The rate of O2 evolution for submersed photosynthesis was measured as a function of incident photon flux density at normal pH and inorganic carbon concentration (pH 8.0, 2 mol m–3), and as a function of inorganic carbon concentration at pH 8.0 at saturating and at limiting photon flux density. The rate of CO2 uptake was measured for emersed photosynthesis as a function of CO2 partial pressure at saturating photon flux density. Previous pH-drift results suggest that Palmaria and Laurencia are able to use HCO inf3 sup– as well as CO2 whereas Lomentaria and Delesseria are restricted to CO2. None of the algae are saturated by 2 mol m–3 inorganic carbon at high light (400 mol m–2 s–1) but are saturated at low light (35 mol m–2 s–1). The inorganic C concentration at which half the light-saturated rate of O2 evolution is achieved is higher for Palmaria and Laurencia (1.51 and 1.85 mol m–3) than for Lomentaria and Delesseria (0.772 and 0.841 mol m–3). The lower values for the latter two species could reflect their putative restriction to CO2. If expressed in terms of CO2, the half-saturation values yield 7.2 and 7.8 mmol m–3 respectively, which are very similar to values obtained previously during pH-drift experiments but at lower concentrations of HCO inf3 sup– , consistent with restriction to CO2. The photosynthetic conductance (m s–1), calculated from the initial slope for photosynthesis at low concentrations of inorganic carbon, correlates with the suggested ability to extract inorganic carbon based on pH-drift results. Calculations made assuming that CO2 is the only species diffusing across the boundary layer are consistent with boundary layer thicknesses of 20 and 19 m for Lomentaria and Delesseria respectively, which is feasible given the rapid water movement in the experiments. For Laurencia however, an unreasonably small boundary layer thickness of 6 m is necessary to explain the flux, which indicates co-diffusion by HCO inf3 sup– . In the apparent absence of external carbonic anhydrase, direct uptake of HCO inf3 sup– , rather than external conversion to CO2 is indicated in this species. In air, the CO2 concentration at which photosynthesis is half-maximal increases in the same order as the ability to raise pH in drift experiments. At 21 kPa the CO2 compensation partial pressures for Palmaria and Laurencia at 0.56 and 1.3 Pa are low enough to suggest a carbon-concentrating mechanism is operating, while those of Lomentaria at 1.8 Pa and particularly that of Delesseria at 4.5 Pa could be explained without a carbon-concentrating mechanism. The algae tested (all except Delesseria) showed more O2 evolution than could be accounted for with a photosynthetic quotient of 1.0 and uncatalysed conversion of HCO inf3 sup– to CO2 outside the cell in high light at pH 8.0 when high algal fresh weight per unit medium was used. These results are concordant with other data suggesting use of HCO inf3 sup– by Palmaria and Laurencia, but discordant with the rest of the available information in indicating use of HCO inf3 sup– by Lomentaria. The reason for this is unclear. The lightsaturated rate of O2 evolution on an algal area basis and the photon flux density needed to saturate photosynthesis were related partly to the habitat from which the seaweeds were collected, but more strongly to the ability to use HCO inf3 sup– . Values for the two users of HCO inf3 sup– , Palmaria (population used was intertidal; also occurs subtidally) and Laurencia (intertidal/shaded intertidal), were greater than for Lomentaria (shaded intertidal), which was greater than Delesseria (subtidal), both of which are believed to be restricted to CO2. In accordance with earlier 13C data and, for Delesseria, estimates of the achieved growth rates in situ, carbon is likely to be saturating and use of HCO inf3 sup– is unlikely to occur in the normal low-light habitats of Lomentaria and Delesseria. Analysis of N-use efficiencies show that they are closer to the low-CO2-affinity Laminariales than the high-CO2-affinity Fucaceae.  相似文献   

10.
Temporal variability in the 13C of foliage (13CF), soil (13CS) and ecosystem (13CR) respired CO2 was contrasted between a 17.2-m tall evenly aged loblolly pine forest and a 35-m tall unevenly aged mature second growth mixed broadleaf deciduous forest in North Carolina, USA, over a 2-year period. The two forests are located at the Duke Forest within a kilometer of each other and are subject to identical climate and have similar soil types. The 13CF, collected just prior to dawn, was primarily controlled by the time-lagged vapor pressure deficit (VPD) in both stands; it was used for calculating the ratio of intercellular to ambient CO2 (Ci/Ca). A remarkable similarity was observed in the relationship between Ci/Ca and time-lagged VPD in these two forests despite large differences in hydraulic characteristics. This similarity emerged as a result of physiological adjustments that compensated for differences in plant hydraulic characteristics, as predicted by a recently proposed equilibrium hypothesis, and has implications to ecophysiological models. We found that in the broadleaf forest, the 13C of forest floor CO2 efflux dominated the 13CR, while in the younger pine forest, the 13C of foliage respired CO2 dominated 13CR. This dependence resulted in a more variable 13CR in the pine forest when compared to the broadleaf forest due to the larger photosynthetic contribution. Given the sensitivity of the atmospheric inversion models to 13CR, the results demonstrate that these models could be improved by accounting for stand characteristics, in addition to previously recognized effects of moisture availability, when estimating 13CR.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Characteristics of inorganic carbon assimilation by photosynthesis in seawater were investigated in six species of the Fucales (five Fucaceae, one Cystoseiraceae) and four species of the Laminariales (three Laminariaceae, one Alariaceae) from Arbroath, Scotland. All of the algae tested could photosynthesise faster at high external pH values than the uncatalysed conversion of HCO 3 - to CO2 can occur, i.e. can use external HCO 3 - . They all had detectable extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, suggesting that HCO 3 - use could involve catalysis of external CO2 production, a view supported to some extent by experiments with an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase. All of the algae tested had CO2 compensation concentrations at pH 8 which were lower than would be expected from diffusive entry of CO2 supplying RUBISCO as the initial carboxylase, consistent with the operation of energized entry of HCO 3 - and / or CO2 acting as a CO2 concentrating mechanism. Quantitative differences among the algae examined were noted with respect to characteristics of inorganic C assimilation. The most obvious distinction was between the eulittoral Fucaceae, which are emersed for part of, or most of, the tidal cycle, and the other three families (Cystoseiraceae, Laminariaceae, Alariaceae) whose representatives are essentially continually submersed. The Fucaceae examined are able to photosynthesise at high pH values, and have lower CO2 compensation concentrations, and lower K1/2 values for inorganic C use in photosynthesis, at pH 8, than the other algae tested. Furthermore, the Fucaceae are essentially saturated with inorganic C for photosynthesis at the normal seawater concentration at pH 8 and 10°C. These characteristics are consistent with the dominant role of a CO2 concentrating mechanism in CO2 acquisition by these plants. Other species tested have characteristcs which suggest a less effective HCO 3 - use and CO2 concentrating mechanism, with the Laminariaceae being the least effective; unlike the Fucaceae, photosynthesis by these algae is not saturated with inorganic C in normal seawater. Taxonomic and ecological implications of these results are considered in relation to related data in the literature.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Ten species of brown macroalgae (five eulittoral and one submersed species of the Fucales; four submersed species of the Laminariales) from a rocky shore at Arbroath, Scotland, were examined for characteristics of emersed photosynthesis in relation to the partial pressure of CO2 and O2. The five eulittoral species of the Fucaceae were approaching CO2 saturation for light-saturated photosynthesis at normal air levels of CO2 (35 Pa) in 21 kPa O2. The normally submersed algae are further from CO2 saturation under these conditions, especially in the case of the four members of the Laminariales. The rate of net photosynthesis in the Fucaceae is O2-independent in the range 2–21 kPa O2 over the entire range of CO2 partial pressure tested (compensation up to 95 Pa). For the other five algae tested, net photosynthesis is slightly inhibited by O2 at 21 kPa relative to 2 kPa over the entire range of CO2 partial pressures tested (compensation up to 95 Pa). CO2 compensation partial pressures are low (<0.5 Pa) for the Fucaceae and independent of O2 in the range 2–42 kPa. For the other five algae, the CO2 compensation partial pressure are higher, and increased with O2 partial pressure in the range 2–42 kPa. These gas exchange data show that the Fucaceae exhibit more C4-like characteristics of their photosynthetic physiology than do the other five species tested, although even the Laminariales and Halidrys siliquosa are not classic C3 plants in their photosynthetic physiology. These data suggest that, in emersed conditions as well as in the previously reported work on submersed photosynthesis, a CO2 concentrating mechanism is operating which, by energized transmembrane transport of inorganic C, accumulates CO2 at the site of RUBISCO and, at least in part, suppresses the oxygenase activity. Work with added extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA), and with a relatively membrane-impermeant inhibitor of the native extracellular CA activity (acetazolamide), suggests that, in emersed conditions as well as in the previously reported work on algae submersed in seawater at pH 8, HCO inf3 sup– is the major inorganic C species entering the cell. At optimal hydration, the rate of emersed photosynthesis in air is not less than the rate of photosynthesis when submersed in seawater, at least for the Fucaceae. 13C ratios of organic C for the Fucaceae are slightly more negative than is the case for the other five algae; these data are consitent with substantial (half or more of the entering inorganic C) leakage of CO2 from the accumulated pool, and with some contribution of atmospheric CO2 to the organic C gain by the eulittoral algae. The predicted increase in N use efficiency of photosynthesis in the Fucaceae, with their more strongly developed CO2 concentrating mechanism, is consistent with data on emersed, but not submersed, photosynthesis for the algae collected from the wild and thus at a poorly defined N status. The more C4-like gas exchange charateristics of photosynthesis in the eulittoral Fucaceae may be important in increasing the water use efficiency of emersed photosynthesis from the limited capital of water available for transpiration by a haptophyte.  相似文献   

13.
The relative contribution of autotrophic carbon sources (aquatic macrophytes, flooded forest, phytoplankton) for heterotrophic bacterioplankton was evaluated in a floodplain lake of the Central Amazon. Stable carbon isotopes (13C) were used as tracers. Values of 13C of different autotrophic sources were compared to those of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and those of bacterially produced CO2.The percentage of carbon derived from C4 macrophytes for bacterially produced CO2 was the highest, on average 89%. The average 13C value of CO2 from bacterial respiration was –18.5 ± 3.3. Considering a fractionation of CO2 of 3 by bacterial respiration, 13C value was –15.5, near C4 macrophyte 13C value (–13.1).The average value of total DOC 13C was –26.8 ± 2.4. The percentage of C4 macrophytes carbon for total DOC was on average 17%. Considering that bacteria consume mainly carbon from macrophytes, the dominance of C3 plants for total DOC probably reflects a faster consumption of the former source, rather than a major contribution of the latter source.Heterotrophic bacterioplankton in the floodplain may be an important link in the aquatic food web, transferring the carbon from C4 macrophytes to the consumers.  相似文献   

14.
Vodnik  D.  Pfanz  H.  Maček  I.  Kastelec  D.  Lojen  S.  Batič  F. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(4):575-579
High abundance of cockspur (Echinochloa crus-galli) at the geothermal carbon dioxide spring area in Staveinci indicates that this species is able to grow under widely varying CO2 concentrations. Living cockspur plants can even be found very close to gas-releasing vents where growth is significantly reduced. Plant height correlated well with CO2 exposure. The 13C value of the CO2 spring air was –3.9 and 13C values of high-, medium-, and low-CO2 plants were –10.14, –10.44, and –11.95 , respectively. Stomatal response directly followed the prevailing CO2 concentrations, with the highest reduction of stomatal conductance in high CO2 concentration grown plants. Analysis of the curves relating net photosynthetic rate to intercellular CO2 concentration (P N-Ci curves) revealed higher CO2 compensation concentration in plants growing at higher CO2 concentration. This indicates adjustment of respiration and photosynthetic carbon assimilation according to the prevailing CO2 concentrations during germination and growth. There was no difference in other photosynthetic parameters measured.  相似文献   

15.
Relative importance of short-term environmental interaction and preconditioning to CO2 exchange response was examined in Fragaria ananasa (strawberry, cv. Quinault). Tests included an orthogonal comparison of 15 to 60-min and 6 to 7-h exposures to different levels of temperature (16 to 32°C), photosynthetically active radiation (PAR, 200 to 800 E m2 s-1), and CO2 (300 to 600 l/l) on successive days of study. Plants were otherwise maintained at 21°C, 300 E m2 s-1 PAR and 300–360 l/l CO2 as standard conditions. Treatment was restricted to the mean interval of 14 h daily illumination and the first 3–4 days of each test week over a 12-week cultivation period. CO2 exchange rates were followed with each step-change in environmental level including ascending/descending temperature/PAR within a test period, initial response at standard conditions on successive days of testing, and measurement at reduced O2. Response generally supported prior concepts of leaf biochemical modeling in identifying CO2 fixation as the major site of environmental influence, while overall patterns of whole plant CO2 exchange suggested additional effects for combined environmental factors and preconditioning. These included a positive interaction between temperature and CO2 concentration on photosynthesis at high irradiance and a greater contribution by dark respiration at lower PAR than previously indicated. The further importance of estimating whole plant CO2 exchange from repetitive tests and measurements was evidenced by a high correlation of response to prior treatment both during the daily test period and on consecutive days of testing.Abbreviations C3 plant a plant in which the product of CO2 fixation is a 3-carbon acid (3-phosphoglyceric acid) - IRGA intra-red gas analyzer - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - RH relative humidity - RuBisCO ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase Reference to a company and/or product named by the Department is only for purposes of information and does not imply approval or recommendation of the product to the exclusion of others which may also be suitable.  相似文献   

16.
The carbon isotope composition of an animals breath reveals the composition of the nutrients that it catabolizes for energy. Here we describe the use of Keeling plots, a method widely applied in ecosystem ecology, to measure the 13C of respired CO2 of small vertebrates. We measured the 13C of Rufous Hummingbirds (Selasphorus rufus) in the laboratory and of Mourning (Zenaida macroura) and White-winged (Z. asiatica) Doves in the field. In the laboratory, when hummingbirds were fed a sucrose based C3 diet, the 13C of respired CO2 was not significantly different from that of their diet (13CC3 diet). The 13C of respired CO2 for C3 fasted birds was slightly, albeit significantly, depleted in 13C relative to 13CC3 diet. Six hours after birds were shifted to a sucrose based C4 diet, the isotopic composition of their breath revealed that birds were catabolizing a mixture of nutrients derived from both the C3 and the C4 diet. In the field, the 13C of respired CO2 from Mourning and White-winged Doves reflected that of their diets: the CAM saguaro cactus (Carnegeia gigantea) and C3 seeds, respectively. Keeling plots are an easy, effective and inexpensive method to measure 13C of respired CO2 in the lab and the field.  相似文献   

17.
Liu  X.Q.  Wang  R.Z.  Li  Y.Z. 《Photosynthetica》2004,42(3):339-344
Photosynthetic pathway types, based on 13C measurements, were determined for 125 species in 95 genera and 32 families growing in rangelands from Inner Mongolia. Of the total species, 4 species from 3 genera and 2 families had C4 photosynthesis (2 species in Gramineae and 2 in Chenopodiaceae) and 118 species from 90 genera and 31 families had C3 photosynthesis. The number of C4 species differed significantly among four rangeland sites, 4 species in desert, 3 species in steppe, but no C4 species were identified in meadow and dune. Six species [e.g. Agriophyllum arenarium Bieb., Bassia dasyphylla O. Kuntze, Saussurea japonica (Thunb.) DC.] earlier identified as C4 species using the enzyme ratio method were found as C3 species using the carbon isotope ratios (13C). Hence the enzyme ratio method for C3 and C4 identification may not always be reliable. The 13C values of 3 species of Crassulaceae, which had been considered as CAM species, differed remarkably [–25.79 for Sedum aizoon L., –24.42 for Osostachys fimbriatus (Turcz.) Berger, and –16.97 for O. malacophyllus (Pall.) Fisch], suggesting that the use of 13C method as a diagnosis for CAM photosynthetic pathway type may not always be reliable and supplementary measurements are needed.  相似文献   

18.
Iinvestigated controls of stream dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) sources andcycling along a stream size and productivity gradient in a temperate forestedwatershed in northern California. Dissolved CO2 (CO2(aq))dynamics in heavily shaded streams contrasted strongly with those of larger,open canopied sites. In streams with canopy cover > 97%, CO2 (aq)was highest during baseflow periods (up to 540 M) and wasnegatively related to discharge. Effects of algal photosynthesis on CO2(aq) were minimal and stream CO2 (aq) was primarily controlledby groundwater CO2 (aq) inputs and degassing losses to theatmosphere. In contrast to the small streams, CO2 (aq) in larger,open-canopied streams was often below atmospheric levels at midday duringbaseflow and was positively related to discharge. Here, stream CO2(aq) was strongly influenced by the balance between autotrophic andheterotrophic processes. Dynamics of HCO3 werelesscomplex. HCO3 and Ca2+ were positivelycorrelated, negatively related to discharge, and showed no pattern with streamsize. Stable carbon isotope ratios of DIC (i.e. 13C DIC)increased with stream size and discharge, indicating contrasting sources of DICto streams and rivers. During summer baseflows, 13C DIC were13C-depleted in the smallest streams (minimum of–17.7) due to the influence of CO2 (aq) derived frommicrobialrespiration and HCO3 derived from carbonateweathering. 13C DIC were higher (up to –6.6)inthe larger streams and rivers due to invasion of atmospheric CO2enhanced by algal CO2 (aq) uptake. While small streams wereinfluenced by groundwater inputs, patterns in CO2 (aq) and evidencefrom stable isotopes demonstrate the strong influence of stream metabolism andCO2 exchange with the atmosphere on stream and river carbon cycles.  相似文献   

19.
The isotopic composition of organic carbon from extant stromatolite-type microbial ecosystems is commonly slanted toward heavy 13 C values as compared to respective compositions of average organic matter (including that from Precambrian stromatolites). This seems the more enigmatic as the bulk of primary producers from benthic microbial communities are known to fix carbon via the C3 pathway normally entailing the sizable fractionations of the RuBP carboxylase reaction.There is reason to believe that the small fractionations displayed by aquatic microorganisms result from the limitations of a diffusion-controlled assimilatory pathway in which the isotope effect of the enzymatic reaction is largely suppressed. Apart from the diffusion-control exercised by the aqueous environment, transport of CO2 to the photosynthetically active sites will be further impeded by the protective slime (polysaccharide) coatings commonly covering microbial mats in which gas diffusivities are extremely low. Ineffective discrimination against13C becomes, however, most pronounced in hypersaline environments where substantially reduced CO2 solubilities tend to push carbon into the role of a limiting nutrient (brine habitats constitute preferential sanctuaries of mat-forming microbenthos since the emergence of Metazoan grazers 0.7 Ga ago). As the same microbial communities had been free to colonize normal marine environments during the Precambrian, the CO2 concentration effect was irrelevant to the carbon-fixing pathway of these ancient forms. Therefore, it might not surprise that organic matter from Precambrian stromatolites displays the large fractionations commonly associated with C3 photosynthesis. Increased mixing ratios of CO2 in the Precambrian atmosphere may have additionally contributed to the elimination of the diffusion barrier in the carbon-fixing pathways of ancient mat-forming microbiota.  相似文献   

20.
Dry weight and Relative Growth Rate of Lemna gibba were significantly increased by CO2 enrichment up to 6000 l CO2 l–1. This high CO2 optimum for growth is probably due to the presence of nonfunctional stomata. The response to high CO2 was less or absent following four days growth in 2% O2. The Leaf Area Ratio decreased in response to CO2 enrichment as a result of an increase in dry weight per frond. Photosynthetic rate was increased by CO2 enrichment up to 1500 l CO2 l–1 during measurement, showing only small increases with further CO2 enrichment up to 5000 l CO2 l–1 at a photon flux density of 210 mol m–2 s–1 and small decreases at 2000 mol m–1 s–1. The actual rate of photosynthesis of those plants cultivated at high CO2 levels, however, was less than the air grown plants. The response of photosynthesis to O2 indicated that the enhancement of growth and photosynthesis by CO2 enrichment was a result of decreased photorespiration. Plants cultivated in low O2 produced abnormal morphological features and after a short time showed a reduction in growth.  相似文献   

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