Modelling the exchange and transformation of matter and energy in ecosystems requires the development of hierarchical structured models of the considered ecosystem compartments. In this context, a model describing the coupled CO2 and H2O gas exchange of a winter wheat canopy was developed and calibrated. The formidation of the model was related to the problems of linking processes at different systém levels. For model calibration, ecophysiological gas exchange characteristics and micro-meteorological data were obtained on both leaf and canopy levels and completed by results of structural and Chemical plant analysis. The gas exchange was measured by a computer-controlled multi-channel systém. On the basis of this data pool, the canopy gas fluxes were calculated by the model as the integrál of the corresponding local fluxes over the area elements of the canopy. The model describes correctly physiological interactions and gas exchange characteristics at both the leaf and canopy levels.
Carbon dioxide, a natural acidic gas, may be ušed for in vivo titration of the buffers in the compartments of cells that contain carbonic anhydíase in intact leaves. A gas systém for the measurement of the CO2 capacity (total inorganic carbon content) of leaves under different extemal CO2 concentrations has been developed. The systém consists of a leaf chamber and of two open (flow-through) channels, one for pre- loading the leaf with CO2 and the other for measurement of the desolubilized CO2. CO2 concentration in the loading channel may be adjusted from 0.03 to 20 %, while CO2 free air is flowing in the burst (desolubilization) channel. The leaf chamber (4.3 X 4.3 X 0.3 cm^) is switched either into the loading channel or into the burst channel. After loading the leaf with high CO2 in the dark the .chamber is switched into the burst channel and the desolubilized CO2 is measured. Preliminary measurements show that the CO2 capacity of a sunflower leaf decreases when the CO2 concentration is increased from 0.03 to 15 %, because of saturation of buffers. The systém can be ušed for direct, non-destructive measurements of pH and buffer capacity in leaf chloroplasts in order to investigate the influence of pH on photosynthesis, the operation of proton pumps and other pH-stabilising mechanisms.