Leaf tissue damaging to seedlings can limit their subsequent growth, and the effects may be more extensive. Compensatory photosynthesis responses of the remnant cotyledon and primary leaf of Pharbitis purpurea to clipping and the effect of clipping on seedling growth were evaluated in a pot-cultivated experiment. Three treatments were conducted in the experiment, which were clipped cotyledon (CC), clipped second leaf (CL), and control group (CG). The area, thickness, mass, and longevity of the remaining cotyledon of CC exhibited over-compensatory growth. In contrast, seedlings of CC had under-compensatory growth in seedling height, root length, seedling mass, and root to shoot ratio. However, the traits of remnant cotyledon and seedling in CL treatment exhibited equal-compensatory growth. Net photosynthetic rate of the cotyledon of CC was significantly higher than those of CL and CG treatments, and the diurnal changes in photosynthetic rates showed significantly different patterns which were unimodal curve (CC) and bimodal curve (CL and CG), respectively. There was no significant difference between CL and CG treatment. Net photosynthetic rate of the primary leaf of CL was significantly higher than that of CG treatment. However, the photosynthetic rates of primary leaves of CL and CG treatments showed similar photosynthetic patterns characterized by a bimodal curve. P. purpurea seedlings used a compensatory growth strategy in the remaining cotyledon or the primary leaf to resist leaf loss and minimize any adverse effects. and W. Zheng ... [et al.].
The proportional light absorptance by photosynthetic tissue (α) is used with chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence methods to calculate electron transport rate (ETR). Although a value of α of 0.84 is often used as a standard for calculating ETR, many succulent plant species and species with crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) have photosynthetic tissues that vary greatly in color or are highly reflective, and could have values of α that differ from 0.84, thus affecting the calculation of ETR. We measured ETR using Chl fluorescence and α using an integrating sphere in 58 plant species to determine the importance of applying a measured value of α when calculating ETR. Values of α varied from 0.55-0.92 with a mean of 0.82 across species. Differences between ETR values calculated with measured α values ranged from 53% lower to 12% greater than ETR values calculated with a standard α value of 0.84 and were significantly different in 39 out of 58 species. While measurements of ETR using Chl fluorescence represent a rapid and effective assessment of physiological performance, the value of α needs to be considered. Measurements of α, especially on species with light-colored or reflective photosynthetic tissue, will allow more accurate determination of photosynthesis in succulent and CAM species. and J. A. Stemke, L. S. Santiago
Diurnal dynamics of photosynthetic character of Angelica sinensis, as well as effect of continuous cropping on leaf photosynthetic character, antioxidant enzyme activity and growth of A. sinensis were investigated under field condition. The results showed that the diurnal net photosynthetic rate of A. sinensis in sunny day exhibited a double-peak pattern, and the peaks occurred at 9:45 and 16:45 h, respectively. There was a significant midday depression with A. sinensis, which was caused principally by stomatal factors such as stomatal conductance. The results also showed that net photosynthetic rate (PN), transpiration rate (E), stomatal conductance (gs), intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci), and chlorophyll content (Chl) of A. sinensis plants under continuous cropping were significantly lower than those of the control. The activity of total superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD) and catalase (CAT), and growth parameters of A. sinensis plants were significantly decreased under continuous cropping condition. This study provides evidence of continuous cropping obstacle effect on photosynthesis, antioxidant enzyme activity, and growth parameters of A. sinensis in a field experiment, which partly explained the yield reduction of A. sinensis in the field, when it was cultivated continuously on the same soil., X. H. Zhang ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Plant density, planting time, harvest timing, and nitrogen influence on short-term gas-exchange properties of carrot cultivars, Topcut and Sugarsnax (Daucus carota L.) were investigated under field conditions. Net photosynthetic rate (PN), stomatal conductance
(gs), and transpiration rate (E) differed significantly with the cultivars studied. Both planting and harvest timing changed the midday PN rates. P N increased as harvest timing advanced regardless of planting time. Late planting combined with late harvesting registered the maximum P N rates (4.5 μmol m-2 s-1). The water-use efficiency (WUE) was altered by temperature at different harvest timings along with the choice of cultivar. Early harvested Sugarsnax had a higher WUE (2.29 mmol mol-1) than TopCut (1.64 mmol mol-1) as Sugarsnax exhibited more stomatal conductance than TopCut. These changes were principally governed by fluctuations observed with air temperature and photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) and altered by the sensitivity of the cultivars to ecological factors. Plant density did not affect the photosynthetic gas-exchange parameters. Our results suggest that carrots manage high population density solely through morphological adaptations with no photosynthetic adjustments. Carrot leaves responded to N application in a curvilinear fashion in both cultivars. N did not alter gs, E, or WUE in carrots. N, applied at a rate of 150 kg N ha-1, increased foliar N up to 2.98%. We conclude that 2.98% of foliar N is sufficient to achieve the maximum photosynthetic rates in processing carrots., A. Thiagarajan, R. Lada, A. Adams., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Caragana korshinskii Kom. is a perennial xerophytic shrub, well known for its ability to resist drought. In order to study ecophysiological responses of C. korshinskii under extreme drought stress and subsequent rehydration, diurnal patterns of gas exchange and chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence parameters of photosystem II as well as Chl content were analyzed. Plant responses to extreme drought included (1) leaf abscission and using stem for photosynthesis, (2) improved instantaneous water-use efficiency, (3) decreased photosynthetic rate and partly closed stomata owing to leaf abscission and low water status, (4) decreased maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) (variable to maximum fluorescence ratio, Fv/Fm), quantum efficiency of noncyclic electron transport of PSII, and Chl a and Chl b. Four days after rehydration, new leaves budded from stems. In the rewatered plants, the chloroplast function was restored, the gas exchange and Chl fluorescence returned to a similar level as control plant. The above result indicated that maintaining an active stem system after leaf abscission during extreme drought stress may be the foundation which engenders these mechanisms rapid regrowth for C. korshinskii in arid environment., D. H. Xu ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Excessive levels of bicarbonate adversely affect the growth and metabolism of plants. Broussonetia papyrifera (L.) Vent. and Morus alba L., belonging to family Moraceae, possess the favorable characteristics of rapid growth and adaptability to adverse environments. We examined the response of these two plant species to bicarbonate stress in terms of photosynthetic assimilation of inorganic carbon. They were exposed to 10 mM sodium bicarbonate in the culture solution for 20 days. The photosynthetic response was determined by measuring the net photosynthetic rate of the leaf, water-use efficiency, and chlorophyll fluorescence on days 10 and 20. The bicarbonate-use capacity of the plants was studied by measuring the carbonic anhydrase activity and the compositions of the stable carbon and hydrogen isotopes. The photosynthetic response to high concentration of bicarbonate varied with plant species and treatment durations. High concentrations of bicarbonate decreased the photosynthetic assimilation of inorganic carbon in the two plant species to half that in the control plants on day 10. Bicarbonate treatment did not cause any damage to the reaction centers of photosystem II in Morus alba; it, however, caused a decline in the quantum efficiency of photosystem II in B. papyrifera on day 20. Moreover, B. papyrifera had a greater bicarbonate-use capacity than M. alba because carbonic anhydrase converted bicarbonate to CO2 and H2O to a greater extent in B. papyrifera. This study showed that the effect of bicarbonate on photosynthetic carbon metabolism in plants was dual. Therefore, the concentration of bicarbonate in the soil should first be considered during afforestation and ecological restoration in karst areas., Y. Y. Wu, D. K. Xing., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Mosses are plants of simple anatomical structure and as they occur in habitats characterised not only by major changes in the concentrations of carbon dioxide, they suffer the stress of periodic water shortages or submergence in water. The condition of hypoxia (submergence in water or CaCl2 solution) prompted the increase in daily fluctuations in malate content, particularly in the gametophores of Polytrichum piliferum Hedw. No significant increases in daily fluctuations of citrate were found in the hypoxia and post-hypoxia conditions. Placing gametophores for 168 h in air with a concentration of CO2 at ∼ 350 μmol mol-1, and 21% of oxygen, after being submerged for 24 h in water, reduced the daily fluctuations of malate and citrate. Keeping the plants in these conditions for a long time (120-168 h) produced the increase in photosynthesis intensity in the gametophores of Mnium undulatum Hedw. and P. piliferum by 13% and 51%, respectively, when compared with plants submerged for 24 h. The intensity of respiration during post-hypoxia, however, was markedly lower compared with the intensity of the process recorded in hypoxia, particularly in the gametophores of P. piliferum. The increased daily fluctuations of malate and NAD(P)H in the studied species under hypoxia could constitute an important element of adaptive strategy to these conditions. and G. Rut, A. Rzepka, J. Krupa.
Shoots of the tropical latex-producing tree Hevea brasiliensis (rubber tree) grow according to a periodic pattern, producing four to five whorls of leaves per year. All leaves in the same whorl were considered to be in the same leaf-age class, in order to assess the evolution of photosynthesis with leaf age in three clones of rubber trees, in a plantation in eastern Thailand. Light-saturated CO2 assimilation rate (Amax) decreased more with leaf age than did photosynthetic capacity (maximal rate of carboxylation, Vcmax , and maximum rate of electron transport, Jmax), which was estimated by fitting a biochemical photosynthesis model to the CO2-response curves. Nitrogen-use efficiency (Amax/Na, Na is nitrogen content per leaf area) decreased also with leaf age, whereas Jmax and
Vcmax did not correlate with Na. Although measurements were performed during the rainy season, the leaf gas exchange parameter that showed the best correlation with Amax was stomatal conductance (gs). An asymptotic function was fitted to the Amax-gs relationship, with R2 = 0.85. Amax, Vcmax, Jmax and gs varied more among different whorls in the same clone than among different clones in the same whorl. We concluded that leaf whorl was an appropriate parameter to characterize leaves for the purpose of modelling canopy photosynthesis in field-grown rubber trees, and that stomatal conductance was the most important variable explaining changes in Amax with leaf age in rubber trees. and B. Kositsup ... [et al.].
In a greenhouse experiment, the influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomus mosseae and Glomus intraradices) and water stress [100% field capacity (FC), 75% FC, 50% FC and 25% FC] on maximal quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry (Fv/Fm) and some other ecophysiological characteristics of two pistachio cultivar (Pistacia vera cv.
Badami-Riz-Zarand and Pistacia vera cv. Qazvini) were investigated.
No difference was found in colonization rate between the two arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) applied. Water stress reduced the mycorrhizal colonization in both cultivars at the same rate but the difference was significant just with severe water stress level (25% FC). The Fv/Fm was also adversely affected by water stress from 75% FC downwards in Qazvini cultivar while in Badami, increase in water-stress intensity had no significant effect on this parameter. Gasexchange parameters were decreased with increasing stress intensity and chlorophyll (Chl) pigments were increased with mild water stress (75% FC) compared with control (100% FC) and then decreased with increasing stress intensity. The carotenoids (Car) content increased significantly in the stressed leaves in all water-stress levels irrespective of AMF treatment and cultivar type.
The adverse effects of water stress were significantly reduced by AM inoculation and in the most of measured parameters, both AMF had an equal influence except with the intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci), where G. intraradices was superior. Results obtained from Chl fluorescence probe indicated that inoculated AMF enhanced photochemical efficiency of light reactions of the PSII in intact pistachio leaf tissues both under irrigation and waterstress conditions. Under mild and moderate water stress, mycorrhizal pistachio plants had higher relative Chl and Car content and higher gas-exchange capacity (increased photosynthesis and transpiration rate) but under severe water-stress condition (25% FC), the effects of mycorrhizal treatments were not noticeable. Data obtained in present study emphasized that Qazvini is more tolerant to water stress than Badami because photosynthesis activity in Qazvini was more efficiently protected than in the Badami, as indicated by related parameters. and V. Bagheri ... [et al.].
To examine the role of sink size on photosynthetic acclimation under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations ([CO2]), we tested the effects of panicle-removal (PR) treatment on photosynthesis in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Rice was grown at two [CO2] levels (ambient and ambient + 200 μmol mol-1) throughout the growing season, and at full-heading stage, at half the plants, a sink-limitation treatment was imposed by the removal of the panicles. The PR treatment alleviated the reduction of green leaf area, the contents of chlorophyll (Chl) and Rubisco after the full-heading stage, suggesting delay of senescence. Nonetheless, elevated [CO2] decreased photosynthesis (measured at current [CO2]) of plants exposed to the PR treatment. No significant [CO2] × PR interaction on photosynthesis was observed. The decrease of photosynthesis by elevated [CO2] of plants was associated with decreased leaf Rubisco content and N content. Leaf glucose content was increased by the PR treatment and also by elevated [CO2]. In conclusion, a sink-limitation in rice improved N status in the leaves, but this did not prevent the photosynthetic down-regulation under elevated [CO2]. and H. Shimono ... [et al.].