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1.
Plant communities around natural CO2 springs have been exposed to elevated CO2 levels over many generations and give us a unique opportunity to investigate the effects of long-term elevated CO2 levels on wild plants. We searched for natural CO2 springs in cool temperate climate regions in Japan and found three springs that were suitable for studying long-term responses
of plants to elevated levels of CO2: Ryuzin-numa, Yuno-kawa and Nyuu. At these CO2 springs, the surrounding air was at high CO2 concentration with no toxic gas emissions throughout the growth season, and there was natural vegetation around the springs.
At each site, high-CO2 (HC) and low-CO2 (LC) plots were established, and three dominant species at the shrub layers were used for physiological analyses. Although
the microenvironments were different among the springs, dicotyledonous species growing at the HC plots tended to have more
starch and less nitrogen per unit dry mass in the leaves than those growing at the LC plots. In contrast, monocotyledonous
species growing in the HC and LC plots had similar starch and nitrogen concentrations. Photosynthetic rates at the mean growth
CO2 concentration were higher in HC plants than LC plants, but photosynthetic rates at a common CO2 concentration were lower in HC plants. Efficiency of water and nitrogen use of leaves at growth CO2 concentration was greatly increased in HC plants. These results suggest that natural plants growing in elevated CO2 levels under cool temperate climate conditions have down-regulated their photosynthetic capacity but that they increased
photosynthetic rates and resource use efficiencies due to the direct effect of elevated CO2 concentration. 相似文献
2.
Atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and global mean temperature are expected to be significantly higher by the end of the 21st century. Elevated CO2 (eCO2) and higher temperature each affect plant physiology and growth, but their interactive effects have not been reviewed statistically
with respect to higher chronic mean temperatures and abrupt heat stress. In this meta-analysis, we examined the effect of
CO2 on the physiology and growth of plants subjected to different temperature treatments. The CO2 treatments were categorized into ambient (<400 ppm) or elevated (>560 ppm) levels, while temperature treatments were categorized
into ambient temperature (AT), elevated temperature (ET; AT + 1.4–6°C), or heat stress (HS; AT + >8°C). Plant species were
grouped according to photosynthetic pathways (C3, C4), functional types (legumes, non-legumes), growth forms (herbaceous, woody), and economic purposes (crop, non-crop). eCO2 enhanced net photosynthesis at AT, ET, and HS in C3 species (especially at the HS level), but in C4 species, it had no effect at AT, a positive effect at ET, and a negative effect at HS. The positive effect of eCO2 on net photosynthesis was greater for legumes than for non-legumes at HS, for non-crops than crops at ET, and for woody than
herbaceous species at ET and HS. Total (W
T) and above- (W
AG) and below-ground (W
BG) biomass were increased by eCO2 for most species groups at all temperatures, except for C4 species and W
BG of legumes at HS. Hence, eCO2 × heat effects on growth were often not explained by effects on net photosynthesis. Overall, the results show that eCO2 effects on plant physiology and growth vary under different temperature regimes, among functional groups and photosynthetic
pathways, and among response variables. These findings have important implications for biomass accumulation and ecosystem
functioning in the future when the CO2 level is higher and climate extremes, such as heat waves, become more frequent. 相似文献
3.
By investigating the R
D-C
a (dark respiration rate-atmospheric CO2 concentration) and P
N (net photosynthetic rate)-C
a curves of bamboo (Fargesia denudata) and poplar (Populus cathayanna), we found that: (1) the minimal R
D was close to ambient CO2 concentration, and the elevated or decreased atmospheric CO2 concentration enhanced the R
D of both species; (2) the response curves of R
D-C
a were simulated well by quadratic function. This phenomenon might be an inherent property of leaf R
D of F. denudata and P. cathayanna. If this was true, it implies that effect of CO2 on R
D could be interpreted with the relationship of R
D-C
a curves and the quadratic function. 相似文献
4.
Edoardo Daly Sari Palmroth Paul Stoy Mario Siqueira A. Christopher Oishi Jehn-Yih Juang Ram Oren Amilcare Porporato Gabriel G. Katul 《Biogeochemistry》2009,94(3):271-287
Profiles of subsurface soil CO2 concentration, soil temperature, and soil moisture, and throughfall were measured continuously during the years 2005 and
2006 in 16 locations at the free air CO2 enrichment facility situated within a temperate loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) stand. Sampling at these locations followed a 4 by 4 replicated experimental design comprised of two atmospheric CO2 concentration levels (ambient [CO2]a, ambient + 200 ppmv, [CO2]e) and two soil nitrogen (N) deposition levels (ambient, ambient + fertilization at 11.2 gN m−2 year−1). The combination of these measurements permitted indirect estimation of belowground CO2 production and flux profiles in the mineral soil. Adjacent to the soil CO2 profiles, direct (chamber-based) measurements of CO2 fluxes from the soil–litter complex were simultaneously conducted using the automated carbon efflux system. Based on the
measured soil CO2 profiles, neither [CO2]e nor N fertilization had a statistically significant effect on seasonal soil CO2, CO2 production, and effluxes from the mineral soil over the study period. Soil moisture and temperature had different effects
on CO2 concentration depending on the depth. Variations in CO2 were mostly explained by soil temperature at deeper soil layers, while water content was an important driver at the surface
(within the first 10 cm), where CO2 pulses were induced by rainfall events. The soil effluxes were equal to the CO2 production for most of the time, suggesting that the site reached near steady-state conditions. The fluxes estimated from
the CO2 profiles were highly correlated to the direct measurements when the soil was neither very dry nor very wet. This suggests
that a better parameterization of the soil CO2 diffusivity is required for these soil moisture extremes. 相似文献
5.
Leaf dynamics of a deciduous forest canopy: no response to elevated CO<Subscript>2</Subscript> 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Leaf area index (LAI) and its seasonal dynamics are key determinants of terrestrial productivity and, therefore, of the response of ecosystems to a rising atmospheric CO2 concentration. Despite the central importance of LAI, there is very little evidence from which to assess how forest LAI will respond to increasing [CO2]. We assessed LAI and related leaf indices of a closed-canopy deciduous forest for 4 years in 25-m-diameter plots that were exposed to ambient or elevated CO2 (542 ppm) in a free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiment. LAI of this Liquidambar styraciflua (sweetgum) stand was about 6 and was relatively constant year-to-year, including the 2 years prior to the onset of CO2 treatment. LAI throughout the 1999–2002 growing seasons was assessed through a combination of data on photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) transmittance, mass of litter collected in traps, and leaf mass per unit area (LMA). There was no effect of [CO2] on any expression of leaf area, including peak LAI, average LAI, or leaf area duration. Canopy mass and LMA, however, were significantly increased by CO2 enrichment. The hypothesized connection between light compensation point (LCP) and LAI was rejected because LCP was reduced by [CO2] enrichment only in leaves under full sun, but not in shaded leaves. Data on PAR interception also permitted calculation of absorbed PAR (APAR) and light use efficiency (LUE), which are key parameters connecting satellite assessments of terrestrial productivity with ecosystem models of future productivity. There was no effect of [CO2] on APAR, and the observed increase in net primary productivity in elevated [CO2] was ascribed to an increase in LUE, which ranged from 1.4 to 2.4 g MJ–1. The current evidence seems convincing that LAI of non-expanding forest stands will not be different in a future CO2-enriched atmosphere and that increases in LUE and productivity in elevated [CO2] are driven primarily by functional responses rather than by structural changes. Ecosystem or regional models that incorporate feedbacks on resource use through LAI should not assume that LAI will increase with CO2 enrichment of the atmosphere. 相似文献
6.
A. K. Romanova 《Russian Journal of Plant Physiology》2005,52(1):112-126
The review of publications concerning the impact of increasing CO2 concentration in the Earths atmosphere (Ca) on higher terrestrial plants. The physiological changes in plants induced by increasing Ca, including growth and biochemical composition, the characteristics of photosynthesis and respiration, as well as the molecular mechanisms of the regulation of the activity of most important biosynthetic enzymes at early and late stages of the exposure to elevated Ca are under consideration. Various concepts of metabolic regulation during acclimation to increasing CO2 concentration are critically reviewed. The pathways of possible involvement of carbonic anhydrase-mediated systems of CO2 transport and concentration during C3 photosynthesis of higher plants, the metabolic and signal mechanisms of photosynthesis inhibition by carbohydrates and the role of ethylene at elevated Ca are presented. The effect of elevated Ca on plant development and source-sink relations, as well as its interaction with other environmental factors, such as mineral, primarily nitrogen nutrition, light, temperature, and water regime, are discussed in with the context of potential forecasting of the consequences of increase in Ca and temperature for the activities of various higher plant forms in the rapidly changing climate.Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 1, 2005, pp. 129–145.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Romanova. 相似文献
7.
Microgravity does not alter plant stand gas exchange of wheat at moderate light levels and saturating CO<Subscript>2</Subscript> concentration 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Plant stand gas exchange was measured nondestructively in microgravity during the Photosynthesis Experiment Subsystem Testing and Operations experiment conducted onboard the International Space Station. Rates of evapotranspiration and photosynthesis measured in space were compared with ground controls to determine if microgravity directly affects whole-stand gas exchange of Triticum aestivum. During six 21-day experiment cycles, evapotranspiration was determined continuously from water addition rates to the nutrient delivery system, and photosynthesis was determined from the amount of CO2 added to maintain the chamber CO2 concentration setpoint. Plant stand evapotranspiration, net photosynthesis, and water use efficiency were not altered by microgravity. Although leaf area was significantly reduced in microgravity-grown plants compared to ground control plants, leaf area distribution was not affected enough to cause significant differences in the amounts of light absorbed by the flight and ground control plant stands. Microgravity also did not affect the response of evapotranspiration to changes in chamber vapor pressure difference of 12-day-old wheat plant stands. These results suggest that gravity naïve plants grown at moderate light levels (300 mol m–2 s–1) behave the same as ground control plants. This implies that future plant-based regenerative life support systems can be sized using 1 g data because water purification and food production rates operate at nearly the same rates as in 1 g at moderate light levels. However, it remains to be verified whether the present results are reproducible in plants grown under stronger light levels. 相似文献
8.
Although global changes can alter ecosystem nutrient dynamics indirectly as a result of their effects on plant litter quality, the interactive effects of global changes on plant litter remain largely unexplored in natural communities. We investigated the effects of elevated CO2, N deposition, warming and increased precipitation on the composition of organic compounds in plant litter in a fully-factorial experiment conducted in a California annual grassland. While lignin increased within functional groups under elevated CO2, this effect was attenuated by warming in grasses and by water additions in forbs. CO2-induced increases in lignin within functional groups also were counteracted by an increase in the relative biomass of forbs, which contained less lignin than grasses. Consequently, there was no net change in the overall lignin content of senesced tissue at the plot level under elevated CO2. Nitrate additions increased N in both grass and forb litter, although this effect was attenuated by water additions. Relative to changes in N within functional groups, changes in functional group dominance had a minor effect on overall litter N at the plot level. Nitrate additions had the strongest effect on decomposition, increasing lignin losses from Avena litter and interacting with water additions to increase decomposition of litter of other grasses. Increases in lignin that resulted from elevated CO2 had no effect on decomposition but elevated CO2 increased N losses from Avena litter. Overall, the interactions among elements of global change were as important as single-factor effects in influencing plant litter chemistry. However, with the exception of variation in N, litter quality had little influence on decomposition over the short term. 相似文献
9.
This study examined the effects of carbon dioxide (CO2)-, ozone (O3)-, and genotype-mediated changes in quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) chemistry on performance of the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria) and its dipteran parasitoid (Compsilura concinnata) at the Aspen Free-Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) site. Parasitized and non-parasitized forest tent caterpillars were reared on two aspen genotypes under elevated levels of CO2 and O3, alone and in combination. Foliage was collected for determination of the chemical composition of leaves fed upon by forest tent caterpillars during the period of endoparasitoid larval development. Elevated CO2 decreased nitrogen levels but had no effect on concentrations of carbon-based compounds. In contrast, elevated O3 decreased nitrogen and phenolic glycoside levels, but increased concentrations of starch and condensed tannins. Foliar chemistry also differed between aspen genotypes. CO2, O3, genotype, and their interactions altered forest tent caterpillar performance, and differentially so between sexes. In general, enriched CO2 had little effect on forest tent caterpillar performance under ambient O3, but reduced performance (for insects on one aspen genotype) under elevated O3. Conversely, elevated O3 improved forest tent caterpillar performance under ambient, but not elevated, CO2. Parasitoid larval survivorship decreased under elevated O3, depending upon levels of CO2 and aspen genotype. Additionally, larval performance and masses of mature female parasitoids differed between aspen genotypes. These results suggest that host-parasitoid interactions in forest systems may be altered by atmospheric conditions anticipated for the future, and that the degree of change may be influenced by plant genotype. 相似文献
10.
This review reports the physiological and metabolic changes in plants during development under elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and/or limited-nitrogen supply in order to establish their effects on leaf senescence induction. Elevated CO2 concentration and nitrogen supply modify gene expression, protein content and composition, various aspects of photosynthesis, sugar metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, and redox state in plants. Elevated CO2 usually causes sugar accumulation and decreased nitrogen content in plant leaves, leading to imbalanced C/N ratio in mature leaves, which is one of the main factors behind premature senescence in leaves. Elevated CO2 and low nitrogen decrease activities of some antioxidant enzymes and thus increase H2O2 production. These changes lead to oxidative stress that results in the degradation of photosynthetic pigments and eventually induce senescence. However, this accelerated leaf senescence under conditions of elevated CO2 and limited nitrogen can mobilize nutrients to growing organs and thus ensure their functionality. 相似文献
11.
Nonibala Khumanthem Mayashree B. Syiem Arvind K. Singh Amar Nath Rai 《Indian journal of microbiology》2007,47(4):345-352
A Mastigocladus species was isolated from the hot spring of Jakrem (Meghalaya) India. Uptake and utilization of nitrate, nitrite, ammonium
and amino acids (glutamine, asparagine, arginine, alanine) were studied in this cyanobacterium grown at different temperatures
(25°C, 45°C). There was 2–3 fold increase in the heterocyst formation and nitrogenase activity in N-free medium at higher
temperature (45°C). Growth and uptake and assimilation of various nitrogen sources were also 2–3 fold higher at 45°C indicating
that it is a thermophile. The extent of induction and repression of nitrate uptake by NO3
− and NH4
+, respectively, differed from that of nitrite. It appeared that Mastigocladus had two independent nitrate/nitrite transport systems. Nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase activitiy was not NO3
−-inducible and ammonium or amino acids caused only partial repression. Presence of various amino acids in the media partially
repressed glutamine synthetase activity. Ammonium (methylammonium) and amino acid uptake showed a biphasic pattern, was energy-dependent
and the induction of uptake required de novo protein synthesis. Ammonium transport was substrate (NH4
+)-repressible, while the amino acid uptake was substrate inducible. When grown at 25°C, the cyanobacterium formed maximum
akinetes that remained viable upto 5 years under dry conditions. 相似文献
12.
While it is well-established that the spatial distribution of soil nutrients (soil heterogeneity) influences the competitive
ability and survival of individual plants, as well as the productivity of plant communities, there is a paucity of data on
how soil heterogeneity and global change drivers interact to affect plant performance and ecosystem functioning. To evaluate
the effects of elevated CO2, soil heterogeneity and diversity (species richness and composition) on productivity, patterns of biomass allocation and
root foraging precision, we conducted an experiment with grassland assemblages formed by monocultures, two- and three-species
mixtures of Lolium perenne, Plantago lanceolata and Holcus lanatus. The experiment lasted for 90 days, and was conducted on microcosms built out of PVC pipe (length 38 cm, internal diameter
10 cm). When nutrients were heterogeneously supplied (in discrete patches), assemblages exhibited precise root foraging patterns,
and had higher total, above- and belowground biomass. Greater aboveground biomass was observed under elevated CO2. Species composition affected the below:aboveground biomass ratio and interacted with nutrient heterogeneity to determine
belowground and total biomass. Species richness had no significant effects, and did not interact with either CO2 or nutrient heterogeneity. Under elevated CO2 conditions, the two- and three-species mixtures showed a clear trend towards underyielding. Our results show that differences
among composition levels were dependent on soil heterogeneity, highlighting its potential role in modulating diversity–productivity
relationships.
Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible to authorized users. 相似文献
13.
The response of the cenosis composition of soil saprotrophic microfungi able to utilize the fulvic fraction of soil organic matter to increased concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide, plant species cover quality and different levels of nitrogen fertilization was determined under field conditions in a free-air carbon dioxide enrichment experiment. Twenty-nine species of microfungi were isolated from the tested soil. The effects of CO2 enrichment and plant species cover were not significant. Nitrogen fertilization was identified as the only significant factor inducing changes in the abundance of soil microorganisms. This was reflected in a relatively low value of quantitative Sørensen similarity index on comparing fertilized and unfertilized treatments and in 2-way ANOVA of total CFU counts. Some differences were observed in species diversity between the two variants of all treatments. No association between microfungi and the factors under study was found by using the Monte Carlo Permutation test in redundancy analysis. 相似文献
14.
Do short-term fluctuations in CO2 concentrations at elevated CO2 levels affect net CO2 uptake rates of plants? When exposed to 600 μl CO2 l?1, net CO2 uptake rates in shoots or leaves of seedlings of two tropical C3 tree species, teak (Tectona grandis L. f.) and barrigon [Pseudobombax septenatum (Jacq.) Dug.], increased by 28 and 52% respectively. In the presence of oscillations with half-cycles of 20 s, amplitude of ca. 170 μl CO2 l?1 and mean of 600 μl CO2 l?1, the stimulation in net CO2 uptake by the two species was reduced to 19 and 36%, respectively, i.e. the CO2 stimulation in photosynthesis associated with a change in exposure from 370 to 600 μl CO2 l?1 was reduced by a third in both species. Similar reductions in CO2-stimulated net CO2 uptake were observed in T. grandis exposed to 40-s oscillations. Rates of CO2 efflux in the dark by whole shoots of T. grandis decreased by 4.8% upon exposure of plants grown at 370 μl CO2 l?1 to 600 μl CO2 l?1. The potential implications of the observations on CO2 oscillations and dark respiration are discussed in the context of free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) systems in which short-term fluctuations of CO2 concentration are a common feature. 相似文献
15.
A controlled environment experiment was conducted to determine the impact of enhanced carbon dioxide and temperature on competition between the C3 grasses Austrodanthonia eriantha and Vulpia myuros. Plants were grown in mixtures and monocultures to compare the responses both with and without an interspecific competitor. Temperature and CO2 were set at current levels (350 ppm CO2; 20 °C day and 10 °C night temperature), in factorial combination with enhanced levels (700 ppm CO2; 23 °C day and 13 °C night temperature). To examine the potential impact of initial seedling size on competition under elevated CO2 and temperature, the two species were combined in mixtures of differing initial sizes. Above-ground growth of all plants was enhanced by increased CO2 and temperature alone, however the combined temperature and CO2 treatment showed a sub-additive effect, where growth was less than expected based on the responses to each factor independently. Austrodanthonia in mixture with Vulpia plants of the same initial size experienced a 27 reduction in growth. Austrodanthonia grown in the presence of an initially larger Vulpia plant experienced a 58 reduction in growth. When the Vulpia plant was initially smaller than Austrodanthonia, growth of the Austrodanthonia was reduced by 16%. The growth of Vulpia appeared to be largely unaffected by the presence of Austrodanthonia. Variation in the CO2 and temperature environment did not affect the pattern of these interspecific interactions, although there was some evidence to suggest that the degree of suppression of Austrodanthonia by Vulpia was less under elevated CO2. These results do not support the initial advantage hypothesis, as Vulpia was always able to suppress Austrodanthonia, regardless of the initial relative sizes of the competitors. Furthermore, the lack of an effect of changing the CO2 or temperature environment on the direction of interspecific competition suggests that the competitiveness of the invasive Vulpia will be minimally affected by changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration or temperature. 相似文献
16.
Elevated CO2 enhances carbon uptake of a plant stand, but the magnitude of the increase varies among growth stages. We studied the relative
contribution of structural and physiological factors to the CO2 effect on the carbon balance during stand development. Stands of an annual herb Chenopodium album were established in open-top chambers at ambient and elevated CO2 concentrations (370 and 700 μmol mol−1). Plant biomass growth, canopy structural traits (leaf area, leaf nitrogen distribution, and light gradient in the canopy),
and physiological characteristics (leaf photosynthesis and respiration of organs) were studied through the growing season.
CO2 exchange of the stand was estimated with a canopy photosynthesis model. Rates of light-saturated photosynthesis and dark
respiration of leaves as related with nitrogen content per unit leaf area and time-dependent reduction in specific respiration
rates of stems and roots were incorporated into the model. Daily canopy carbon balance, calculated as an integration of leaf
photosynthesis minus stem and root respiration, well explained biomass growth determined by harvests (r
2 = 0.98). The increase of canopy photosynthesis with elevated CO2 was 80% at an early stage and decreased to 55% at flowering. Sensitivity analyses suggested that an alteration in leaf photosynthetic
traits enhanced canopy photosynthesis by 40–60% throughout the experiment period, whereas altered canopy structure contributed
to the increase at the early stage only. Thus, both physiological and structural factors are involved in the increase of carbon
balance and growth rate of C. album stands at elevated CO2. However, their contributions were not constant, but changed with stand development. 相似文献
17.
We determined the interactive effects of irradiance, elevated CO2 concentration (EC), and temperature in carrot (Daucus carota var. sativus). Plants of the cv. Red Core Chantenay (RCC) were grown in a controlled environmental plant growth room and exposed to 3
levels of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) (400, 800, 1 200 μmol m−2 s−1), 3 leaf chamber temperatures (15, 20, 30 °C), and 2 external CO2 concentrations (C
a), AC and EC (350 and 750 μmol mol−1, respectively). Rates of net photosynthesis (P
N) and transpiration (E) and stomatal conductance (g
s
) were measured, along with water use efficiency (WUE) and ratio of internal and external CO2 concentrations (C
i/C
a). P
N revealed an interactive effect between PAR and C
a. As PAR increased so did P
N under both C
a regimes. The g
s
showed no interactive effects between the three parameters but had singular effects of temperature and PAR. E was strongly influenced by the combination of PAR and temperature. WUE was interactively affected by all three parameters.
Maximum WUE occurred at 15 °C and 1 200 μmol m−2 s− 1 PAR under EC. The C
i
/C
a
was influenced independently by temperature and C
a. Hence photosynthetic responses are interactively affected by changes in irradiance, external CO2 concentration, and temperature. EC significantly compensates the inhibitory effects of high temperature and irradiance on
P
N and WUE. 相似文献
18.
The inverse relationship between the number of stomata on a leaf surface and the atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration
([CO2]) in which the leaf developed allows plants to optimise water-use efficiency (WUE), but it also permits the use of fossil
plants as proxies of palaeoatmospheric [CO2]. The ancient conifer family Araucariaceae is often represented in fossil floras and may act as a suitable proxy of palaeo-[CO2], yet little is known regarding the stomatal index (SI) responses of extant Araucariaceae to [CO2]. Four Araucaria species (Araucaria columnaris, A. heterophylla, A. angustifolia and A. bidwillii) and Agathis australis displayed no significant relationship in SI to [CO2] below current ambient levels (~380 ppm). However, representatives of the three extant genera within the Araucariaceae (A. bidwillii, A. australis and Wollemia nobilis) all exhibited significant reductions in SI when grown in atmospheres of elevated [CO2] (1,500 ppm). Stomatal conductance was reduced and WUE increased when grown under elevated [CO2]. Stomatal pore length did not increase alongside reduced stomatal density (SD) and SI in the three araucariacean conifers
when grown at elevated [CO2]. These pronounced SD and SI reductions occur at higher [CO2] levels than in other species with more recent evolutionary origins, and may reflect an evolutionary legacy of the Araucariaceae
in the high [CO2] world of the Mesozoic Era. Araucariacean conifers may therefore be suitable stomatal proxies of palaeo-[CO2] during periods of “greenhouse” climates and high [CO2] in the Earth’s history. 相似文献
19.
A. A. Kosobryukhov 《Russian Journal of Plant Physiology》2009,56(1):6-13
We studied the influence of prolonged (a few weeks) and short-term (a few hours) periodical elevation of the ambient CO2 concentration ([Ca]) on the photosynthetic apparatus and carbohydrate content in the third leaf of three-week-old cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) plants. On the basis of experimental data and subsequent modeling, we revealed the limiting processes in the photosynthetic apparatus functioning: Rubisco activity, the rate of ribulose bisphosphate (CO2 acceptor) regeneration, the rate of triose phosphate utilization in the Calvin cycle, and the influence of stomata on the photosynthesis rate. An increase in soluble carbohydrate content and a decrease in starch accumulation at a short-term [Ca] elevation indicate an important role of carbohydrate accumulation and their partition between organs in the regulation of the photosynthesis. We concluded that periodic [Ca] elevation can be used to improve plant productivity. 相似文献
20.
To determine whether long-term growth in elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration [CO2] and nitrogen fertilization affects woody tissue CO2 efflux, we measured stem CO2 efflux as a function of temperature in three different size classes of shoots of Populus nigra L. (clone Jean Pourtet) on two occasions in 2004. Trees were growing in a short rotation coppice in ambient (370 μmol mol−1) and elevated (550 μmol mol−1, realised by a Free Air Carbon dioxide Enrichment system) [CO2], and measurements were performed during the third growing season of the second rotation. Elevated CO2 did not affect Q10 or specific stem CO2 efflux (E10) of overall poplar shoots. The lack of any effect of N on stem CO2 efflux indicated that nutrients were sufficient. Specific stem CO2 efflux differed significantly between shoot sizes, emphasizing the importance of tree size when scaling-up respiration measurements
to the stand level. Variation in stem CO2 efflux could not be satisfactorily explained by temperature as the only driving variable. We hypothesize that transport of
CO2 with the sapflow might have confounded our results and could explain the high Q10 values reported here. Predicting the respiratory carbon loss in a future elevated [CO2] world must therefore move beyond the single-factor temperature dependent respiration model and involve multiple factors
affecting stem CO2 efflux rate. 相似文献