Mesembryanthemum crystallinum is an annual succulent plant that is being used as an emerging healthy leafy vegetable. To investigate the growth and physiological response of M. crystallinum to artificial lighting, five different light treatments were applied at 150 µmol(photon) m-2 s-1, which were white (W), different rations of red/blue (B) (15, 40, and 70%B), and blue (100%B), respectively. Our results showed that plants could gain as much as edible leaf area and dry mass with a certain ratio of blue (40%) in comparison with W. Plants grown under 100%B resulted in reduced photosynthetic rate, leaf area, and fresh mass compared with W. Adding blue fraction in the light regime enhanced the photosynthetic performance by influencing the amount of chlorophyll (Chl), Chl a/b, and specific leaf area. Under red/blue treatments, the electron transport rate and effective quantum yield of both PSII and PSI increased, while the nitrate content was reduced and flavonoids and total antioxidant capacity were unaffected.
The seeds of soybean cv. Aldana and spring wheat cv. Torka were soaked for 24 h in solution of zearalenone [ZEN, 2,4-dihydroxy-6-(10-hydroxy-6-oxo-trans-1-undecenyl)-benzonic acid lactone, 4 mg dm-3] and then they were sown in the pot experiment in an open vegetation hall. The after-effects of ZEN on growth of plants, net photosynthetic (PN) and transpiration (E) rates, stomatal conductance (gs), photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) and on final seeds yield, were determined. A significant increase of seeds yield was revealed in plants of both cultivars i.e. by 22% and 19% of seed (grain) number and by 28 and 24% of seed (grain) mass, in soybean and in wheat, respectively. The photosynthetic rate (PN) was stimulated during the juvenile and final phase by about 13.6% (average) in soybean plants. During other developmental stages, assimilation of CO2 was retarded. The response of CO2 assimilation in wheat plants was less pronounced as compared to that in soybean, but an increase of PN by over 24% near the final stage of development was observed. The quantum yield of PSII electron transport (ΦPSII) in soybean plants was changed after the treatment of seeds by ZEN similarly as for the rate of CO2, whereas in wheat it continued to gradually increase i.e. during the whole growth period. Changes of ΦPSII both in soybean and in wheat plants, as the response to ZEN treatment, were accompanied with an increase in the efficiency of changes occurring within the antenna (Fv'/Fm') as well as within centres of photochemical reactions (qp). The conclusion is that ZEN can affect plant growth and development in many ways, as well as in the status and functioning of the photosynthetical apparatus. Some of the effects can be very longlasting, as e.g. stimulation of production of seed yield in response to treatment of seeds with this substance. and J. Kościelniak ... [et al.].
An open-top chamber experiment was carried out from April through October 2006 to examine the effects of elevated (80 nmol mol-1) atmospheric O3 on Ginkgo biloba (4-years-old) in urban area. The air with ambient O3 (AA, ≈ 45 nmol mol-1) was used as control. The leaf mass and size, leaf area index, net photosynthetic rate (PN), apparent quantum yield, transpiration rate, and stomatal conductance were decreased by elevated O3 (EO) exposure. Visible foliar injury, which is light-brown flecks, was observed in the EO OTCs after 90 d of exposure. Carboxylation efficiency (ΦCO2) and photorespiration and dark respiration rates were enhanced by EO exposure in the first half of the season, but all of them turned to be lower than those of the AA control at the end of experiment. Stomata limitation of photosynthesis was significantly higher than control in the whole season (p<0.05). Chlorophyll (Chl) content was lower in EO variant than in the control and the difference became more and more apparent through the season. Hence the decrease in PN of G. biloba exposed to EO was the result of both stomatal and non-stomatal limitations. In the early season, the inhibition of photosynthesis was mainly caused by the stomatal limitation, and the earliest response was photoprotective down-regulation of photosynthesis but not photodamage. However, at the end of the season, the non-stomatal limiting factors such as decrease in Chl content, decrease in ΦCO2, and anti-oxidative enzyme activity became more important. and X.-Y. He ... [et al.].
The "source" level in the olive cultivar Leccino was varied by girdling at different stages of fruit growth. Afterwards, the effects on gas exchange, fruit growth, and ripening and blooming were studied. Girdling during fruit growth did not significantly influence net photosynthetic rate (PN) except in the last phase of fruit growth when the PN was reduced. In the girdled branch, PN began to decrease at the onset of starch accumulation because fruit growth ceased. In mid-November stomatal conductance (gs) and transpiration rate (E) were also reduced by girdling, whereas sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) increased in leaves from the girdled branches. The total chlorophyll content (Chl) tended to decrease in parallel with the reduced PN. Girdling did not substantially influence the leaf and shoot water contents. The large availability of assimilates seems to cause an earlier fruit ripening. In general, girdling increased fruit dry mass. Healing before the time when the majority of pulp growth occurs reduced the effect of girdling. June girdling increased the pit dry mass. Girdling at the beginning of August and September, compared to the control, increased the pulp dry mass, but the pit dry mass did not differ with respect to the control. The percentage of oil in the fruit, on a dry mass basis, increased with August and September girdlings, but the percentage of oil in the pulp did not change. Girdling reduced shoot growth, but the internode length was unchanged. Girdling slightly stimulated differentiation of flower buds.
The effects of growth temperature on changes in net photosynthetic rate (PN) and the chlorophyll fluorescence induction parameter Fv/Fm were investigated after cold stress in inbred maize lines with different degrees of cold tolerance. There was no significant difference between lines grown at optimum temperatures of 25/23 and 20/18 °C as regards PN and Fv/Fm determined at the growth temperature, but these parameters were lower for plants grown at a suboptimum temperature of 15/13 °C. After cold treatment, the decrease in PN was more pronounced in chilling-sensitive lines. The higher the growth temperature was, the more pronounced decrease occurred in PN and Fv/Fm. Thus at low growth temperature both damaging and adaptive processes occur. and T. Janda ... [et al.].
The leaf water potential, gas-exchange parameters and chlorophyll fluorescence were evaluated in five common oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) tenera hybrids 913X1988, 1425X2277, 748X1988, 7418X1988, and 690X1988 under water deficit with an aim to identify hybrids which can cope up better under such conditions and understand possible differences among hybrids in relation to the physiological mechanisms triggered by water deficit. Our findings indicate oil palm hybrids 913X1988, 1425X2277, and 7418X1988 maintained higher leaf water potentials than the other hybrids. Hybrids 7418X1988 and 1425X2277 recorded lower stomatal conductance after water deficit, which resulted in higher intrinsic water-use efficiency. The excess light energy produced due to decreased photosynthesis in 7418X1988 and 690X1988 hybrids under water deficit was dissipated as heat by higher nonphotochemical quenching. The maximum efficiency of photosystem II was not affected, even after withholding water for 24 days, suggesting an increased efficiency of photoprotection mechanisms in all these oil palm hybrids., K. Suresh ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii
In carob tree (Ceratonia siliqua) radiant energy saturated net photosynthetic rate (PN) during summer was about 10 % of the spring values. This was accompanied by a reduction in stomatal conductance (gs), which only partially explains the strong reduction in PN. Photosynthetic capacity (Pmax) and quantum yield (Φ), both measured under saturating CO2, had the maximum in spring (about 34 μmol m-2 s-1 and 0.08 mol mol-1, respectively) and both decreased in late summer to about 55 % of their spring values. Despite strong decreases in Φ, photoinhibition of photosystem 2 (PS2) was negligible or easily reversible in carob leaves subjected to summer drought, since Fv/Fm, measured in the morning, did not show appreciable changes. The recovery of affected parameters was very rapid after the first rains in late October. The chlorophyll (Chl) alb ratio in the end of the summer was 2.6, a value significantly lower than 3.6 obtained in the spring, suggesting that Chl a was preferentially reduced. and J. C. Ramalho, J. A. Lauriano, M. A. Nunes.
Glechoma longituba (Nakai) Kupr. is a perennial shade plant with pharmaceutical importance. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of light intensity on the growth, photosynthesis, and accumulation of secondary metabolites in G. longituba grown under six different light environments. The high light intensity decreased the leaf size, specific leaf area, and aboveground dry mass, the number of grana per chloroplast, the number of lamella per granum, the thickness of the grana, the apparent quantum efficiency, the chlorophyll (Chl) content, the concentrations of ursolic and oleanolic acid. The high light increased the stomatal density, the stoma size, the number of chloroplast per a cell, the chloroplast size, the dark respiration rate, the light saturation point, the light compensation point, and the Chl a/b ratio. With the reduction in the light intensity, the light-saturated net photosynthetic rate, the aerial dry mass per plant, and the yields of ursolic and oleanolic acid decreased after an initial increase, peaking at 16 and 33% of sunlight levels. Overall, the 16 and 33% irradiance levels were the most efficient in improving the yields and qualities of the medicinal plant. The lower light demand and growth characteristics suggest that G. longituba is an extremely
shade-tolerant plant and that appropriate light intensity management might be feasible to obtain higher yields of secondary metabolites in agricultural management., L. X. Zhang, Q. S. Guo, Q. S. Chang, Z. B. Zhu, L. Liu, Y. H. Chen., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Pearson) plants were grown in growth chambers for 25 days with cadmium (Cd) and then exposed briefly to ozone (O3). Gas exchange, chlorophyll a fluorescence, and pigment composition were analysed in leaves at the end of the treatment to assess the effects of a single pollutant and their combination on photosynthesis. The CO2 assimilation rate was dramatically reduced in plants subjected to the combined treatment, while the single effect of Cd appeared less severe than that of O3. The decline of CO2 photoassimilation found in all
O3-exposed plants was attributed to both stomatal and nonstomatal limitations. Tomato plants seemed to detoxify Cd to a great extent, but this resulted in growth suppression. In response to O3 exposure, the plants protected their photosystems by heat dissipation of excess energy via the xanthophyll cycle. Cd combined with O3 affected adversely this cycle resulting in an increase in photosynthetic performance under the same experimental light conditions., E. Degl’Innocenti, A. Castagna, A. Ranieri, L. Guidi., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Field trials under rain-fed conditions at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) in Colombia were conducted to study the comparative leaf photosynthesis, growth, yield, and nutrient use efficiency in two groups of cassava cultivars representing tall (large leaf canopy and shoot biomass) and short (small leaf canopy and shoot biomass) plant types. Using the standard plant density (10,000 plants ha-1), tall cultivars produced higher shoot biomass, larger seasonal leaf area indices (LAIs) and greater final storage root yields than the short cultivars. At six months after planting, yields were similar in both plant types with the short ones tending to form and fill storage roots at a much earlier time in their growth stage. Root yield, shoot and total biomass in all cultivars were significantly correlated with seasonal average LAI. Short cultivars maintained lower than optimal LAI for yield. Seasonal PN, across cultivars, was 12% greater in short types, with maximum values obtained in Brazilian genotypes. This difference in PN was attributed to nonstomatal factors (i.e., anatomical/biochemical mesophyll characteristics). Compared with tall cultivars, short ones had 14 to 24 % greater nutrient use efficiency (NUE) in terms of storage root production. The lesser NUE in tall plants was attributed mainly to more total nutrient uptake than in short cultivars. It was concluded that short-stemmed cultivars are superior in producing dry matter in their storage roots per unit nutrient absorbed, making them advantageous for soil fertility conservation while their yields approach those in tall types. It was recommended that breeding programs should focus on selection for more efficient short- to medium-stemmed genotypes since resource-limited cassava farmers rarely apply agrochemicals nor recycle residual parts of the crop back to the soil. Such improved short types were expected to surpass tall types in yields when grown at higher than standard plant population densities (>10,000 plants ha-1) in order to maximize irradiance interception. Below a certain population density (<10,000 plants ha-1), tall cultivars should be planted. Findings were discussed in relation to cultivation and cropping systems strategies for water and nutrient conservation and use efficiencies under stressful environments as well as under predicted water deficits in the tropics caused by trends in global climate change. Cassava is expected to play a major role in food and biofuel production due to its high photosynthetic capacity and its ability to conserve water as compared to major cereal grain crops. The interdisciplinary/interinstitutions research reported here, including, an associated release of a drought-tolerant, short-stem cultivar that was eagerly accepted by cassava farmers, reflects well on the productivity of the CIAT international research in Cali, Colombia., and M. A. El-Sharkawy, S. M. de Tafur