The effects of experimental warming on the growth and physiology of grass Elymus nutans and forb Potentilla anserina were studied by using open-top chambers (OTCs) in an alpine meadow of the eastern Tibetan Plateau. The warming treatment increased mean air and soil surface temperatures by 1.53°C and 0.50°C, respectively, but it reduced soil relative water content in the surface layer. Experimental warming enhanced the growth and gas exchange of E. nutans, while it reduced those of P. anserina. Experimental warming resulted in an increased efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) in E. nutans, while decreasing it in P. anserina; significantly stimulated non-photochemical quenching, antioxidative enzymes and non-enzymes in both species; and significantly reduced malondialdehyde content in E. nutans, while promoting it in P. anserina. The results of this study indicated that the two species showed different growth responses to experimental warming and their different physiological performances further indicated that experimental warming alleviated the negative effect of low temperature on the growth and development of E. nutans, but limited the competitive ability of P. anserina in the study region. and F. S. Shi ... [et al.].
After saturating irradiation for 3 h (SI), the original fluorescence F0 increased while the photosystem 2 (PS2) photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) declined significantly. These parameters could largely recover to the levels of dark-adapted leaves after 3 h of subsequent dark recovery. No net loss of the D1 proteins occurred after SI. Soybean and pumpkin leaves had different responses to SI. Low temperature fluorescence parameters, F685 and F685/F735, decreased significantly in soybean leaves but not in pumpkin leaves. Part of the light-harvesting complex LHC2 dissociated from PS2 complexes in soybean leaves but not in pumpkin leaves, as shown by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and SDS-PAGE. The photon-saturated PS2 electron transport activity declined significantly in pumpkin thylakoids but not in soybean thylakoids. In addition, a large amount of phosphorylated D1 proteins was found in dark-adapted soybean leaves but not in dark-adapted pumpkin leaves. Hence at excessive irradiance soybean and pumpkin have the same protective strategy against photo-damage, reversible down-regulation of PS2, but two different mechanisms, namely the reversible down-regulation is related to the dissociation of LHC2 in soybean leaves but not in pumpkin leaves. and Hai-Bo Zhang, Da-Quan Xu.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) catalyzes reversible hydration of CO2 and it can compensate for the lack of H2O and CO2 in plants under stress conditions. Antioxidative enzymes play a key role in scavenging reactive oxygen species and in protecting plant cells against toxic effects. Tomato represents a stress-sensitive plant while violet orychophragmus belongs to adversity-resistant plants. In order to study the drought responses in tomato and violet orychophragmus plants, CA and antioxidative enzyme activities, photosynthetic capacity, and water potential were determined in plants under drought stress. We found that there were similar change trends in CA activity and drought tolerance in violet orychophragmus, and in antioxidative enzymes and drought tolerance in tomato plants. Basic mechanisms of drought resistance should be identified for understanding of breeding measures in plants under stress conditions., W. H. Sun, Y. Y. Wu, X. Y. Wen, S. J. Xiong, H. G. He, Y. Wang, G. Q. Lu., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Field studies of gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence of three desert shrub species, Hedysarum fruticosum var. mongolicum, Artemisia ordosia, and Salix pasmmophylla, showed different patterns under different leaf temperature (T1) and incident photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). H. fruticosum var. mongolicum and A. ordosia exhibited higher PN and gs than S. pasmmophylla, especially under very high T1 (>46 °C) and high PPFD (>2 100 µmol m-2 s-1) in hot summer. The decreases of PN with the diurnal course were due mainly to stomata closure. However, PN of S. pasmmophylla was seriously depressed by very high temperature from midday to evening as shown by the negative PN in hot summer, whereas none of such depression was found in spring. Maximal spring photochemical efficiency of photosystem 2 (PS2), i.e, Fv/Fm, was the lowest at 16:00, indicating the injury of PS2 by heat at this stage. In hot summer again, all the three shrubs underwent pronounced midday depression of PN and gs, while in spring they showed a one-peak response. And the first peak appeared 2 h earlier in hot summer than in spring for all the three shrubs. It was the high temperature that led to the different patterns of gas exchange and the serious depression of PN in S. pasmmophylla. H. fruticosum var. mongolicum and A. ordosia were much more tolerant to heat and high irradiance than S. pasmmophylla, which fixed most of CO2 at the fast growing stage in spring. Nevertheless, in hot summer it had to survive the severe hot environment through strong respiration and storage of CO2 only in the early morning. and G. M. Jiang, G. J. Zhu.
In addition to other factors, high altitude (HA) environment is characterized by high photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). Photosynthetic characteristics of wild and cultivated plants were studied at different irradiances at Losar, India (altitude 4 200 m). Wild plants were tolerant to high PPFDs. Slopes of curve between net photosynthetic rate (PN) and intercellular CO2 concentration
(Ci) or stomatal conductance (gs) increased with increase in irradiance suggesting insensitivity or tolerance of these plants to higher PPFD. Cultivated plants, however, were sensitive to higher PPFD, their slopes of curves between PN and Ci or gs decreased with increased PPFD. Tolerance or insensitivity to higher PPFD was an important parameter affecting plant performance at HA. and N. Kumar, S. Kumar, P. S. Ahuja.
Jatropha curcas, one of the most important energy plant resources, is vulnerable to chilling. To evaluate the effects of chilling on photosynthesis of J. curcas and intraspecific differences in chilling tolerance, seedlings of twelve populations were treated with the temperature of 4-6°C for five consecutive nights with normal environmental temperature during the day. Night chilling treatment decreased light-saturated photosynthetic rate (Pmax) significantly for all populations. Stomatal limitation could not explain the decreased Pmax because intracellular CO2 concentration was not significantly reduced by night chilling in all populations (with only one exception). The decreased soluble-protein content, which may be related to the increased malondialdehyde (MDA) content, contributed to the decreased Pmax. The increased MDA content indicated that oxidative stress occurred after night chilling, which was associated with the larger decrease in Pmax compared with the decrease in actual photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, and the slight increase in thermal dissipation of excessive energy. After five-day recovery, MDA (with two exceptions) and Pmax still did not recover to the levels as those before night chilling treatment for all populations, indicating that J. curcas was vulnerable to chilling. Chilling tolerance was significantly different among populations. Populations originating from high elevations had greater chilling-tolerant abilities than populations originating from low elevations, showing a local adaptation to environmental temperatures of origins. Our study shed light on the possibility to find or breed chilling-tolerant genotypes of J. curcas. and Y.-L. Zheng ... [et al.].
Gas exchange and fluorescence parameters were measured simultaneously in two Zea mays L. cultivars (Liri and 121C D8) to assess the relationship between the quantum yield of electron transport (ΦPS2) and the quantum yield of CO2 assimilation (ΦCO2) in response to photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). The cv. Liri was grown under controlled environmental conditions in a climate chamber (CC) while cv. 121C D8 was grown in CC as well as outdoors (OT). By exposing the two maize cultivars grown in CC to an increasing PPFD, higher photosynthetic and photochemical rates were evidenced in cv. Liri than in cv. 121C D8. In Liri plants the ΦPS2/ΦCO2 ratio increased progressively up to 27 with increasing PPFD. This suggests that the reductive power was more utilised in non-assimilatory processes than in CO2 assimilation at high PPFD. On the contrary, by exposing 121C D8 plants to increasing PPFD, ΦPS2/ΦCO2 was fairly constant (around 11-13), indicating that the electron transport rate was tightly down regulated by CO2 assimilation. Although no significant differences were found between ΦPS2/ΦCO2 of the 121C D8 maize grown under CC and OT by exposing them to high PPFD, the photosynthetic rate and photochemical rates were higher in OT maize plants. and N. D'Ambrosio, C. Arena, A. Virzo de Santo.
The acclimation depression of capacity of photon utilisation in photochemical reactions of photosystem 2 (PS2) can develop already after three months of cultivation of the Norway spruces (Picea abies [L.] Karst.) under elevated concentrations of CO2 (i.e., ambient, AC, + 350 µmol(CO2) mol-1 = EC) in glass domes with adjustable windows. To examine the role that duration of EC plays in acclimation response, we determined pigment contents, rate of photosynthesis, and parameters of chlorophyll a fluorescence for sun and shade needles after three seasons of EC exposure. We found responses of shaded and exposed needles to EC. Whereas the shaded needles still profited from the EC and revealed stimulated electron transport, for the exposed needles the stimulation of both electron transport activity and irradiance saturated rate of CO2 assimilation (PNmax) under EC already disappeared. No signs of the PS2 impairment were observed as judged from high values of potential quantum yield of PS2 photochemistry (FV/FM) and uniform kinetics of QA reoxidation for all variants. Therefore, the long-term acclimation of the sun-exposed needles to EC is not necessarily accompanied with the damage to the PS2 reaction centres. The eco-physiological significance of the reported differentiation between the responses of shaded and sun exposed needles to prolonged EC may be in changed contribution of the upper and lower crown layers to the production activity of the tree. Whereas for the AC spruces, PNmax of shaded needles was only less than 25 % compared to exposed ones, for the EC spruces the PNmax of shaded needles reached nearly 40 % of that estimated for the exposed ones. Thus, the lower shaded part of the crown may become an effective consumer of CO2. and J. Kalina ... [et al.].
This work aimed to study the effects of commercial doses of the fungicide, Mancozeb, on the photosynthetic apparatus of lettuce young leaves (YL) and expanded leaves (EL). Seven days after Mancozeb application, chlorophyll a fluorescence, pigment contents, lipid peroxidation, and proline content were evaluated. Independently of leaf age, Mancozeb treatment reduced the efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry, increased the nonphotochemical quenching and proline content, decreased pigment contents, and induced lipid peroxidation. Moreover, EL showed a more stable photosynthetic apparatus, less prone to oxidative damages compared with YL. The parameters measured proved to be good markers for the rapid and preliminary diagnosis of fungicide toxicity., M. C. Dias, P. Figueiredo, I. F. Duarte, A. M. Gil, C. Santos., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Radish (Raphanus sativus L.) and carrot (Daucus carota L.), plants with underground storage organs grown in the field, were exposed to either ambient (UVA) or 20 % UV-B (UVE) enhanced solar radiation till their root yield stage. In radish, UVE produced a significant increase in shoot and root fresh mass (FM), increase in the contents of chlorophyll, carotenoids, flavonoids, and total proteins per unit FM, Hill reaction rate, and root yield. In contrast, carrot responded negatively to UVE showing a loss in the above parameters. and S. M. J. Nithia, N. Shanthi, G. Kulandaivelu.