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1.
A culture of Skeletonema costatum grown at a light intensity of 3 klux and at 20°C was synchronized in diurnally intermittent illumination of 12 hour light and 12 hour dark. The culture was hardly fully synchronous as the cell division period lasted about 9 hours. The cell division started in the middle of the light period. The concentration of the pigments: chlorophyll a, chlorophyll 6 and fucoxanthin and the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis were followed every hour during the 24 hour period. Both the concentration of pigments and the photosynthetic activity showed a rhythmical variation. The concentration per cell of all three pigments examined increased during the development of the cells and decreased automatically during the period of cell division. An increase in the pigment concentration was found only in the light period. The rate of light-saturated photosynthesis calculated per unit of cell number increased during the cell development and decreased during the division period. The increase in the photosynthetic activity at light-saturation started about 4 hours after the end of cell division, which was 4 hours before the light was turned on while the increase in the concentration of chlorophyll a first started 1–2 hours after this moment. The variation in photosynthetic activity was compared with that found by other workers. The results found with Chlorella ellipsoidea by Japanese scientists (Nihci et al.) was explained as an inhibition phenomenon because the cells were not adapted to the experimental conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The photosynthetic response to light can be accurately defined in terms of (1) the initial slope (quantum yield); (2) the asymptote (light-saturated rate); (3) the convexity (rate of bending); and (4) the intercept (dark respiration). The effects of photoinhibition [which damages the reaction centre of photosystem II (PSII)] on these four parameters were measured in optically thin cultures of green plant cells (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii). The convexity of the light-response curve decreased steadily from a value of 0.98 (indicating a sharply bending response) to zero (indicating Michaelis-Menten kinetics) in response to increasing photoinhibition. Photoinhibition was quantified from the quantum yield of inhibited cells relative to that of control cells. The quantum yield was estimated by applying linear regression to low-light data or by fitting a non-rectangular hyperbola. Assuming the initial slope is linear allowed comparison with earlier work. However, as the convexity was lowered this assumption resulted in a significant underestimate of the true quantum yield. Thus, the apparent level of photoinhibition required for a zero convexity and the initial decrease in light-saturated photosynthesis depended upon how the quantum yield was estimated. If the initial slope of the light response was assumed to be linear the critical level of inhibition was 60%. If the linear assumption was not made, the critical level was 40%. At the level of inhibition where the convexity reached zero, the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis also began to decrease, indicating that this level of inhibition caused photosynthesis to be limited at all light intensities by the rate of PSII electron transport. At this level of inhibition the Fm-Fi signal (where Fm is maximal chlorophyll fluorescence and Fi is intermediate chlorophyll fluorescence of dark adapted cells; Briantais et al. 1988) from the fluorescence induction curve was zero and the Fi-Fo signal (where Fo is initial chlorophyll fluorescence of dark adapted cells) was 30% of the control, indicating dramatic reduction or complete elimination of one type of PSII. These data do not contradict published mathematical models showing that the ratio of the maximum speed of electron transport in PSII relative to the maximum speed of plastoquinone electron transport can determine the convexity of the photosynthetic response to light.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll content - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fo, Fi, Fm initial, intermediate, and maximal Chl fluorescence of dark adapted cells - P rate of net photosynthesis per unit chlorophyll (mol-(mg Chl)–1 · s–1) - PSII photosystem II - PQ plastoquinone - initial slope to the light-response curve - convexity (rate of bending) of the light-response curve of photosynthesis - Q photosynthetically active photon flux density (400–700 nm, mol · m–2 · –1) The present investigation was supported by the Swedish Council for Forestry and Agricultural Research, the Swedish Environmental Protection Board, and the Swedish Natural Science Research Council. We thank Dr. Deborah D. Kaska (Department of Biological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, Calif., USA) for giving us Chlamydomonas algae. We thank Professor G. Öquist (Department of Plant Physiology, University of Umea, Umea, Sweden) for his encouragement, valuable comments and discussion.  相似文献   

3.
Iron starvation induced marked increases in flavodoxin abundance and decreases in light-saturated and light-limited photosynthesis rates in the diatom Chaetoceros muelleri. Consistent with the substitution of flavodoxin for ferredoxin as an early response to iron starvation, increases of flavodoxin abundance were observed before declines of cell division rate or chl a specific photosynthesis rates. Changes in the abundance of flavodoxin after the addition of iron to iron-starved cells indicated that flavodoxin was not actively degraded under iron-replete conditions. Greater declines in light-saturated oxygen evolution rates than dark oxygen consumption rates indicated that the mitochondrial electron transfer chain was not affected as greatly by iron starvation as the photosynthetic electron transfer chain. The carbon:nitrogen ratio was unaffected by iron starvation, suggesting that photosynthetic electron transfer was a primary target of iron starvation and that reductions in nitrate assimilation were due to energy limitation (the C:N ratio would be expected to rise under nitrogen-limited but energy-replete conditions). Parallel changes were observed in the maximum light-saturated photosynthesis rate and the light-limited initial slope of the photosynthesis-light curve during iron starvation and recovery. The lowest photosynthesis rates were observed in iron-starved cells and the highest values in iron-replete cells. The light saturation parameter, Ik, was not affected by iron starvation, nor was the chl-to-C ratio markedly reduced. These observations were consistent with iron starvation having a similar or greater effect on photochemical charge separation in PSII than on downstream electron transfer steps. Declines of the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence in iron-starved cells were consistent with PSII being a primary target of iron starvation. The functional cross-section of PSII was affected only marginally (<20%) by iron starvation, with the largest values observed in iron-starved cells. The rate constant for electron transfer calculated from fast repetition rate fluorescence was found to covary with the light-saturated photosynthesis rate; it was lowest in the most severely starved cells.  相似文献   

4.
The characteristics of photosynthetic gas exchange, chlorophyll a fluorescence, and xanthophyll cycle pigments during flag leaf senescence of field-grown wheat plants were investigated. With senescence progressing, the light-saturated net CO2 assimilation rate expressed either on a basis of leaf area or chlorophyll decreased significantly. The apparent quantum yield of net photosynthesis decreased when expressed on a leaf area basis but increased when expressed on a chlorophyll basis. The maximal efficiency of PSII photochemistry decreased very little while actual PSII efficiency, photochemical quenching, and the efficiency of excitation capture by open PSII centers decreased considerably. At the same time, non-photochemical quenching increased significantly. A substantial decrease in the contents of violaxanthin and zeaxanthin, but a slight decrease in the content of antheraxanthin were observed. However, the de-epoxidation status of the xanthophyll cycle was positively correlated with progressive senescence. This increase was due mainly to a smaller decrease in zeaxanthin than in violaxanthin. Our results suggest that PSII apparatus remained functional, but a down-regulation of PSII occurred under the steady state of photosynthesis in senescent flag leaves. Such a down-regulation was associated with the closure of PSII centers and an enhanced xanthophyll cycle-related thermal dissipation in the PSII antennae.  相似文献   

5.
A Persistent Daily Rhythm in Photosynthesis   总被引:9,自引:1,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The luminescent marine dinoflagellate, Gonyaulax polyedra, exhibits a diurnal rhythm in the rate of photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity measured by incorporation of C14O2, at different times of day. With cultures grown on alternating light and dark periods of 12 hours each, the maximum rate is at the 8th hour of the light period. Cultures transferred from day-night conditions to continuous dim light continue to show the rhythm of photosynthetic capacity (activity measured in bright light) but not of photosynthesis (activity measured in existing dim light). Cultures transferred to continuous bright light, however, do not show any rhythm. Several other properties of the photosynthetic rhythm are similar to those of previously reported rhythms of luminescence and cell division. This similarity suggests that a single mechanism regulates the various rhythms.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the plasticity of the photosynthetic apparatus in the endangered aquatic macrophyte Althenia orientalis to the gradient of light availability within its meadow canopy. We determined diurnal change in situ irradiance, light quality, in vivo chlorophyll a fluorescence, ex situ oxygen evolution rates, respiration rate and pigment concentration. The levels of photosynthetic photon flux density (PFD) and ultraviolet radiation (UVR) and the red/far-red ratio decreased with depth within the canopies of A. orientalis. Apical leaves had a greater decrease of the maximal quantum yield (F v/F m) in the morning and a faster recovery rate in the afternoon than those in the basal ones. The relative electron transport rate (ETRr) was not saturated at any time of the day, even in the apical leaves that received the highest light. The maximum light-saturated rate of gross photosynthesis (GPmax) took place in apical leaves around noon. The chlorophyll a/b ratio values were higher, and the chlorophyll/carotenoid ratio values lower, in apical leaves than basal ones. The highest concentrations in total carotenoids were reached in the apical leaves around noon. A. orientalis has a high capacity to acclimatize to the changes in the light environment, both in quality and quantity, presenting sun and shade leaves in the same stem through the vertical gradient in the canopy.  相似文献   

7.
Photosynthesis of Ectocarpus siliculosus (Dillwyn) Lyngb. under continuous saturating red irradiation follows a circadian rhythm. Blue-light pulses rapidly stimulate photosynthesis with high effectiveness in the troughs of this rhythm but the effectiveness of such pulses is much lower at its peaks. In an attempt to understand how blue light and the rhythm affected photosynthesis, the effects of inorganic carbon on photosynthetic light saturation curves were studied under different irradiation conditions. The circadian rhythm of photosynthesis was apparent only at irradiances which were not limiting for photosynthesis. The same was found for blue-light-stimulated photosynthesis, although stimulation was observed also under very low red-light irradiances after a period of adaptation, provided that the inorganic-carbon concentration was not in excess. Double-reciprocal plots of light-saturated photosynthetic rates versus the concentration of total inorganic carbon (up to 10 mM total inorganic carbon) were linear and had a common constant for half-saturation (3.6 mM at pH 8) at both the troughs and the peaks of the rhythm and before and after blue-light pulses. Only at very low carbon concentrations was a clear deviation found from these lines for photosynthesis at the rhythm maxima (red and blue light), which indicated that the strong carbon limitation specifically affected photosynthesis at the peak phases of the rhythm. Very high inorganic carbon concentrations (20 mM) in the medium diminished the responses to blue light, although they did not fully abolish them. The kinetics of the stimulation indicate that the rate of photosynthesis is affected by two blue-light-dependent components with different time courses of induction and decay. The faster component seemed to be at least partially suppressed at red-light irradiances which were not saturating for photosynthesis. Lowering the pH of the medium had the same effects as an increase of the carbon concentration to levels of approx. 10 mM. This indicates that Ectocarpus takes up free CO2 only and not bicarbonate, although additional physiological mechanisms may enhance the availability of CO2.Abbreviation TIC total inorganic carbon  相似文献   

8.
Growth and photosynthetic characteristics, P max (maximum light-saturated oxygen production rate) and (photosynthetic affinity), of Microcystis aeruginosa were studied in continuous cultures under a range of photoperiod lengths and growth irradiances. Microcystis showed a low specific maintenance rate constant and a high growth affinity for light (typical cyanobacterial features), but required a dark period to obtain maximum growth rate. P max and per unit dry weight increased, as did pigment content, when less light became available. By regulation in and P max (crucial in light-limiting and high-light conditions, respectively) this buoyant species can flourish in low light, but also in high-light environments which may arise when buoyancy is lost.The two different types of light conditions affected growth, and photosynthesis, in different ways. One needs thus to discriminate between photoperiod- and irradiance-limitation, which restricts the utility of simple algal growth models. It was emphasized that photosynthetic adaptation patterns of light-limited species may resemble short-term nutrient uptake kinetics of nutrient-limited organisms.With prior knowledge of the growth limitation, we were able to assess the growth rate of a natural population of Microcystis from its photosynthetic response and from data of laboratory cultures of a known physiological state.  相似文献   

9.
Apparent size of the photosynthetic unit in Chlorella pyrenoidosa was estimated by the method of Emerson and Arnold: rate of oxygen evolution was measured under repetitive saturating flashes of about 10-microsecond duration separated by dark periods of 0.033 to 0.100 second. Cells used were taken from six steady state cultures maintained at different light intensities. Cell characteristics included a variation in chlorophyll content from 1 to 5%. Apparent size of the photosynthetic unit varied systematically with chlorophyll content in the range of 1560 to 2350 chlorophylls per O2 per flash. Values for unit size showed no unusual statistical distribution and were not changed significantly by addition of low level background light at 645 or 705 nanometers. Maximal rate of unit turnover, calculated from light-saturated rate and unit size, varied inversely with chlorophyll content in the range of 70 to 180 per second.  相似文献   

10.
Nuphar lutea is an amphibious plant with submerged and aerial foliage, which raises the question how do both leaf types perform photosynthetically in two different environments. We found that the aerial leaves function like terrestrial sun-leaves in that their photosynthetic capability was high and saturated under high irradiance (ca. 1,500 μmol photons m−2 s−1). We show that stomatal opening and Rubisco activity in these leaves co-limited photosynthesis at saturating irradiance fluctuating in a daily rhythm. In the morning, sunlight stimulated stomatal opening, Rubisco synthesis, and the neutralization of a night-accumulated Rubisco inhibitor. Consequently, the light-saturated quantum efficiency and rate of photosynthesis increased 10-fold by midday. During the afternoon, gradual closure of the stomata and a decrease in Rubisco content reduced the light-saturated photosynthetic rate. However, at limited irradiance, stomatal behavior and Rubisco content had only a marginal effect on the photosynthetic rate, which did not change during the day. In contrast to the aerial leaves, the photosynthesis rate of the submerged leaves, adapted to a shaded environment, was saturated under lower irradiance. The light-saturated quantum efficiency of these leaves was much lower and did not change during the day. Due to their low photosynthetic affinity for CO2 (35 μM) and inability to utilize other inorganic carbon species, their photosynthetic rate at air-equilibrated water was CO2-limited. These results reveal differences in the photosynthetic performance of the two types of Nuphar leaves and unravel how photosynthetic daily rhythm in the aerial leaves is controlled.  相似文献   

11.
Photosynthetic activity and growth physiology of Spirulina platensis (Nordstedt) Geitler cultures maintained at ultrahigh cell densities (i.e. above 100 mg chlorophyll-L?1) in a newly designed photobioreactor were investigated. Nitrogen (NaNO3) in standard Zarouk medium was characterized as a major nutrient-limiting factor in such cultures. The effect of ultrahigh cell density on photoinhibition of photosynthesis, as reflected by chlorophyll fluorescence and photosynthetic oxygen evolution, was studied: elevating the population density may arrest photoinhibition induced by high photon flux density, as well as low temperature. The relationship between incident irradiance and oxygen production rate was linear in situ for cultures at the optimal cell density, indicating that light limitation rather than light saturation or photoinhibition is the dominant condition outdoors in cultures of ultrahigh cell densities. In contrast with other reports, the extent of biomass loss at night due mainly to dark respiration was found to be relatively small when cell density was optimal, exerting only a minor effect on overall net productivity. Measurements of oxygen consumption at night revealed low rates of respiration, which may be explained by the low value of the volumetric mass transfer coefficient (KLa) of oxygen. Hence, reduced oxygen tension may play a role in preventing full expression of the respiratory potential in ultrahigh cell density cultures in which photoadaptive strategy may explain cell composition. Ultrahigh cell densities optimized with respect to the intensity of the light source, the length of the light path, and the extent of stirring represent the key for obtaining high output rates of cell mass and some natural products.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of different light qualities on the photosynthetic rate, dark respiration, intracellular carbon and nitrogen content, and accumulation of photosynthetic pigments and cell-wall polysaccharides during short-term incubation (5 h) of the red algaGelidium sesquipedale was investigated. The same photon irradiance of 50mol m–2 s–2 below the light saturation point of photosynthesis was applied in each case. Blue light stimulated photosynthesis, dark respiration and the accumulation of chlorophyll and biliproteins, phycoerythrin in particular. The accumulation of internal carbon and nitrogen was greater under blue light than under the other light qualities. In contrast, the percentage of cell-wall polysaccharides was higher in red light. The content of cell-wall polysaccharides decreased during the time of incubation in all light treatments except in red light. The action of a non-photosynthetic photoreceptor in the control of cell-wall polysaccharide synthesis is suggested because the accumulation of cell-wall polysaccharides was not correlated with net photosynthesis in contrast to what occurred with carbon, chlorophyll and phycoerythrin accumulation.  相似文献   

13.
This study explores adaptive strategies of epiphytic bryophytes in the understorey by investigating the photosynthetic characteristics, pigment concentrations and nutrient stoichiometry, as well as other functional traits of three trunk-dwelling bryophytes in a subtropical montane cloud forest in SW China. The results showed that their light-saturated net photosynthetic rate (Anmax?L), light saturation point (Isat), light compensation point (Ic) and dark respiration rate (Rd) were ca 0.55, 106.72, 4.17 and 0.25?μmol?m?2?s?1, respectively. Furthermore, the samples demonstrated photosynthetic down-regulation under high irradiance. These photosynthetic characteristics can be explained by higher total chlorophyll concentrations, specific leaf area, chlorophyll per unit leaf N (Chl/N), lower ratio of chlorophyll a to chlorophyll b (Chl a/b) and photosynthetic nitrogen-use efficiency. We suggest that the bryophytes adapted to the shaded understorey microhabitats through a series of correlations and trade-offs between functional traits.  相似文献   

14.
When growing in laternating light-dark cycles, nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) in the filamentous, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Oscillatoria sp. strain 23 (Oldenburg) is predominantly present during the dark period. Dark respiration followed the same pattern as nitrogenase. Maximum activities of nitrogenase and respiration appeared at the same time and were 3.6 mol C2H4 and 1.4 mg O2 mg Chl a -1·h-1, respectively. Cultures, adapted to light-dark cycles, but transferred to continuous light, retained their reciprocal rhythm of oxygenic photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation. Moreover, even in the light, oxygen uptake was observed at the same rate as in the dark. Oxygen uptake and nitrogenase activity coincided. However, nitrogenase activity in the light was 6 times as high (22 mol C2H4 mg Chl a -1·h-1) as compared to the dark activity. Although some overlap was observed in which both oxygen evolution and nitrogenase activity occurred simultaneously, it was concluded that in Oscillatoria nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis are separated temporary. If present, light covered the energy demand of nitrogenase and respiration very probably fulfilled a protective function.  相似文献   

15.
Glycerol induced a limitation on photosynthetic carbon assimilation by phosphate when supplied to leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.). This limitation by phosphate was evidenced by (i) reversibility of the inhibition of photosynthesis by glycerol by feeding orthophosphate (ii) a decrease in light-saturated rates of photosynthesis and saturation at a lower irradiance, (iii) the promotion of oscillations in photosynthetic CO2 assimilation and in chlorophyll fluorescence, (iv) decreases in the pools of hexose monophosphates and triose phosphates and increases in the ratio of glycerate-3-phosphate to triose phosphate, (v) decreased photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, and increased non-photochemical quenching, specifically of the component which relaxed rapidly, indicating that thylakoid energisation had increased. In barley there was a massive accumulation of glycerol-3-phosphate and an increase in the period of the oscillations, but in spinach the accumulation of glycerol-3-phosphate was comparatively slight. The mechanism(s) by which glycerol feeding affects photosynthetic carbon assimilation are discussed in the light of these results.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - C i intercellular concentration of CO2 - P phosphate - PGA glycerate-3-phosphate - Pi orthophosphate - triose-P sum of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate  相似文献   

16.
Gamma-irradiation (250 Gy) applied to photoautotrophic cell suspensions of Euphorbia characias L. in the exponential growth phase led to the arrest of cell division and to a subsequent overaccumulation of sucrose and dry matter. From the fourth day of culture, the chlorophyll content and gross photosynthesis were not depressed by gamma-treatment nor by sugar accumulation. In both cultures, no difference was observed between oxygen uptake in the light at CO2 saturating concentration and in the dark, suggesting that no change in energy-dissipative reactions took place after irradiation. A slight increase in oxygen uptake in both light and dark was observed in irradiated cells during the first four days. However, in the absence of limiting factors, the photosynthetic capacities of the dividing and irradiated non-dividing photoautotrophic cells were identical but higher than that of the non-dividing cells in the stationary growth phase. This suggests that gamma-irradiation arrests cell division by a mechanism different to that occuring in stationary-phase cultures. This may be of value in investigating the metabolism of secondary products.  相似文献   

17.
The variation in Skeletonema cells grown at 3 klux continuous illumination and 20°C is reported. Four different types of lamps gave no difference in the photosynthetic characteristics. The average diameter of the cells decreased from 8–3.5 μ during their six months vegetative period. The ratio between the pigment content in the largest and the smallest cells was about 2:1. A good correlation between cell volume and chlorophyll a content was found for this species. The content of chlorophyll c generally varied between 4 and 17 per cent of the chlorophyll a content. — A distinct correlation between the chlorophyll a content and the rate of photosynthesis per unit of cells at low light intensity was found. The rate of photosynthesis, in mg C per mg chlorophyll a and hour at 1 klux, varied between 0.40 and 0.70 for all 60 experiments with an average value of 0.56. The corresponding value for cells deficient in phosophorus was 0.19 and for cells deficient in nitrogen 0.09. — The material also showed a good correlation between the rate of photosynthesis per cell at 1 klux and the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. Ik varied between 7 and 13 klux.  相似文献   

18.
CO2 fixation was studied in a lichen, Xanthoria parietina, kept in continuous light, and with cyclic changes in light intensity, dark period or temperature. The diurnal and seasonal courses of CO2 exchange were followed. The rate of net photosynthesis was observed to fall from morning to evening, and this decline was more pronounced in winter than in summer. The maximal net photosynthetic rate, 223 ng CO2g-1dws-1, occured in winter and the minimum, 94 ng CO2g-1dws-1, late in spring. The light compensation point in summer was four times as high as in winter. In continuous light (180 or 90 mol photons m-2s-1, 15°C) net photosynthesis decreased noticeably during one week, falling below the level maintained in a 12 h light: 12 h dark cycle. Photosynthetic activity did not decrease, however, in lichens held in continuous light (90 mol photons m-2s-1) with cyclic changes of temperature (12 h 20 °C: 12 h 5 °C). Active photosynthesis was also maintained in light of cyclically changing intensity (12 h: 12 h, 15 °C) when night-time light was at least 75% lower than illumination by day. A dark period of 4 hours in a 24-h light:dark cycle was sufficient to keep CO2 fixation at the control level. It seems that plants need an unproductive period during the day to survive and this can be induced by fluctuations in light and/or temperature.  相似文献   

19.
Anabaena sp., isolated from a rice paddy, was investigated for its nitrogen fixation as measured by acetylene reduction activity (ARA) in P-limited continuous and light-limited semi-continuous cultures. Growth rate (μ) under P limitation was a function of cell P content (q p). Both the photosynthetic capacity (Pmax) and photosynthetic efficiency (α) increased with μ when expressed per cell, but not per unit chla. The ARA of steady-state cells under P limitation increased with μ and was linearly related to C-fixation rate. This was apparently a consequence of the control of C-fixation by P limitation. In light-limited cells, steady state ARA, both at the culture light intensity and in the dark, increased asymptotically with μ, but the activity in the dark was only about 51% of that in the light. When the light level of steady-state cells grown at a high in intensity was switched to a low level, ARA decreased exponentially with time. Dark ARA activity also showed a similar decline, but at much lower levels. Thus, ARA depended not only on light history, but also immediate photosynthesis. Steady-state ARA at the ambient intensity or in the dark showed a strong correlation with14C-fixation rate. ARA of light-limited cells showed the same light-saturation characteristics as their14C-fixation, with the same initial saturation intensity,I k. The ratios of Pmax to the maximum ARA (ARAmax), and α to the slope of ARA (αara) were identical. A comparison of gross to net photosynthesis and N2 fixation suggested that there was little leakage or excretion of fixed C or N.  相似文献   

20.
Solar ultraviolet radiation (UVA + UVB) impairs photosynthesis in marine algae. Canopy blades of the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera (L.) C. Agardh are exposed to high levels of solar UV in the field. To determine the effects of UV radiation on photosynthesis in the giant kelp and to identify sites of UV damage, O2 evolution, reaction center organization, light harvesting, and energy transfer efficiency were measured in canopy blades that had been exposed to elevated levels of UV in the laboratory. UV treatment reduced both the light-saturated rate and the light-limited rate of photosynthesis by 50% but produced no significant change in the rate of dark respiration. A significant impairment of photosystem II (PSII) reaction center function was observed, suggesting that PSII is a major site of damage in chromophytes. Reduced quantum efficiency of photosynthesis and loss of energy transfer from light-harvesting pigments (fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a, and chlorophyll c) to PSII indicate that the major light-harvesting complex of M. pyrifera, the fucoxanthin-chlorophyll protein complex (FCPC), was another site of UV damage. These measures provide the first evidence of a direct effect of UV radiation on specific sites in the photosynthetic apparatus of chromophytes and indicate that in situ fluorescence excitation analysis may be a simple means to detect UV stress in algae.  相似文献   

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