首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Characteristics of gas exchange and morphology of a spring ephemeral, Erythronium japonicum, in comparison with a sun plant, Glycine max
Authors:Shinichi Sawada  Toshiaki Kato  Makiko Sato  Minobu Kasai
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biofunctional Science, Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University, Hirosaki 036-8561, Japan
Abstract:Morphological characteristics and responses of gas exchanges to light intensity were examined in a typical vernal species, Erythronium japonicum Decne (E. japonicum), grown (i) on the floor of a deciduous broad-leaved Quercus mongolica forest (one of its native habitats, the Q. mongolica stand); (ii) bare land left undisturbed for 9 years after forest clearing (the bare stand); and (iii) in a sun crop, soybean, grown for 110 days in an experimental field and for 17 days in pots, in order to evaluate the adaptability of the photosynthetic process of this vernal species to its shady native habitats. The daytime solar radiation, ai and leaf temperatures and leaf–air vapor pressure difference (VPD) were significantly higher at the bare stand than at the Q. mongolica stand. When environmental factors observed at the Q. mongolica and bare stands were reproduced in an assimilation chamber, leaf temperatures of E. japonicum plants increased markedly with increased radiation, whereas those of soybean plants differed little from the respective air temperatures. The photosynthetic and transpiration rates and stomatal conductance in the former plants placed under conditions at the Q. mongolica stand increased with radiation and reached respective steady state values at maximum radiation at the site; whereas, under the conditions at the bare stand, they also increased and reached respective steady state values, but then continuously decreased to be lower than the respective value at the Q. mongolica stand. However, both rates and the conductance in the soybean plants under both conditions increased significantly with radiation and reached much higher respective values at the respective maximum radiations. Water use efficiency for E. japonicum plants was much higher under conditions at the Q. mongolica stand than at the bare stand and was practically equal to those for soybean plants under both conditions. Water potential in the leaves of E. japonicum at maximum radiation at the bare stand was one-third that of those at the Q. mongolica stand. The potential in soybean leaves differed little between both conditions and was roughly equal to the low value in E. japonicum leaves at the bare stand conditions. The stomatal densities on upper and lower leaf surfaces and the ratio of root weight to leaf area (R : L) differed little between E. japonicum plants grown at both stands as well as between young and adult soybean plants. However, the densities on the upper and lower surfaces of E. japonicum were 25% and 60% of the respective values of both soybean plants. The ratios of R : L of the E. japonicum plants were only one-quarter that of the young and adult soybean plants. The cooperation between these morphological and gas exchange characteristics in E. japonicum plants is discussed in relation to adaptation to the environment in native habitats.
Keywords:leaf–  air vapor pressure difference  micro-environmental factors  ratio of root weight to leaf area  stomatal conductance  stomatal density  water potential in leaf
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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