In order to use rationally switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) introduced in a large scale in semiarid regions on the Loess Plateau of China, we investigated and compared soil water storage dynamics, diurnal and seasonal changes in leaf photosynthetic characteristics, and biomass production of switchgrass grown under three different row spacing (20, 40, and 60 cm). Results indicated that photosynthetic parameters showed a pronounced seasonality. Diurnal course of net photosynthetic rate (P N) was bimodal, showing obvious midday depression, which was mainly due to stomatal limitation in May and June, by nonstomatal limitation in August, and both stomatal and nonstomatal factors in September. Generally, P N, stomatal conductance, instantaneous water-use efficiency, light-saturated net photosynthetic rate, saturation irradiance, and compensation irradiance increased with increasing row spacing. Plant height, leaf width, and a relative growth rate of biomass accumulation were significantly higher at the row spacing of 60 cm, while 20 cm spacing showed significantly higher aboveground biomass production and the biomass water-use efficiency. All these confirmed that soil water is the key limiting factor influencing switchgrass photosynthesis, and suggested that the wide row plantation (i.e., 60 cm) was more beneficial to switchgrass growth, while narrow spacing was in favor of improving switchgrass productivity and water-use efficiency., Z. J. Gao, B. C. Xu, J. Wang, L. J. Huo, S. Li., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Bothriochloa ischaemum L. is an important species in many temperate regions, but information about the interactive effects of water stress and fertilization on its photosynthetic characteristics was inadequate. A pot experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of three water [80% (HW), 40% (MW), and 20% (LW) of field capacity (FC)] and four fertilization regimes [nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), nitrogen with phosphorus (NP), and no fertilization] on leaf photosynthesis. Leaf gas exchange and photosynthetic light-response curves were measured at the flowering phase of B. ischaemum. Water stress decreased not only the leaf gas-exchange parameters, such as net photosynthetic rate (PN), stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration rate (E), and water-use efficiency (WUE) of B. ischaemum, but also downregulated
PN-photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) curve parameters, such as light-saturated net photosynthetic rate (PNmax), apparent quantum efficiency (AQE), and light compensation point (LCP). Fertilization (N, P, and NP) enhanced the daily mean PN values and PNmax under the HW regime. Addition of N (either alone or with P) improved the photosynthetic capacity of B. ischaemum under the MW and LW regimes by increasing PN, PNmax, and AQE and reducing dark respiration rate and LCP, but the addition of P alone did not significantly improve the photosynthetic performance. Decline in PN under each fertilization regime occurred during the day and it was caused mainly by nonstomatal limitation. Our results indicated that water was the primary limiting factor for photosynthesis in B. ischaemum, and that appropriate levels of N fertilization improved its potential photosynthetic capacity under water-deficit conditions. and W. Z. Xu, X. P. Deng, B. C. Xu.