The interception process in subalpine Norway spruce stands plays an important role in the distribution of throughfall. The natural mountain spruce forest where our measurements of throughfall and gross precipitation were carried out, is located on the tree line at an elevation of 1,420 m a.s.l. in the Western Tatra Mountains (Slovakia, Central Europe). This paper presents an evaluation of the interception process in a natural mature spruce stand during the growing season from May to October in 2018–2020. We also analyzed the daily precipitation events within each growing season and assigned to them individual synoptic types. The amount and distribution of precipitation during the growing season plays an important role in the precipitation-interception process, which confirming the evaluation of individual synoptic situations. During the monitored growing seasons, precipitation was normal (2018), sub-normal (2019) and above-normal (2020) in comparison with long-term precipitation (1988–2017). We recorded the highest precipitation in the normal and above-normal precipitation years during the north-eastern cyclonic synoptic situation (NEc). During these two periods, interception showed the lowest values in the dripping zone at the crown periphery, while in the precipitation sub-normal period (2019), the lowest interception was reached by the canopy gap. In the central crown zone near the stem, interception reached the highest value in each growing season. In the evaluated vegetation periods, interception reached values in the range of 19.6–24.1% of gross precipitation total in the canopy gap, 8.3–22.2% in the dripping zone at the crown periphery and 45.7–51.6% in the central crown zone near the stem. These regimes are expected to change in the Western Tatra Mts., as they have been affected by windstorms and insect outbreaks in recent decades. Under disturbance regimes, changes in interception as well as vegetation, at least for some period of time, are unavoidable.
Drought impacts severely crop photosynthesis and productivity. Development of transgenic rice overexpressing maize phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) is a promising strategy for improving crop production under drought stress. However, the molecular mechanisms of protection from PEPC are not yet clear. The objective of this study was: first, to characterize the response of individual photosynthetic components to drought stress; second, to study the physiological and molecular mechanisms underlying the drought tolerance of transgenic rice (cv. Kitaake) over-expressing maize PEPC. Our results showed that PEPC overexpressing improved the ability of transgenic rice to conserve water and pigments during drying as compared to wild type. Despite the fact that drought induced reactive oxygen species and damaged photosystems (especially, PSI) in both lines, higher intercellular CO2 concentration protected the photosynthetic complexes, peptides, and also ultrastructure of thylakoid membranes against the oxidative damage in transgenic rice. In conclusion, although photosynthetic apparatus suffered an inevitable and asymmetric impairment during drought conditions, PEPC effectively alleviated the oxidative damage on photosystems and enhanced the drought tolerance by increasing intercellular CO2 concentration. Our investigation provided critical clues for exploring the feasibility of using C4 photosynthesis to increase the yield of rice under the aggravated global warming., W. J. Shen, G. X. Chen, J. G. Xu, Y. Jiang, L. Liu, Z. P. Gao, J. Ma, X. Chen, T. H. Chen, and C. F. Lv., and Obsahuje seznam literatury