Changes in chloroplastidic pigments, gas exchange and carbohydrate concentrations were assessed during the rapid initial expansion of C. guianensis leaflet. Leaves at metaphyll stage were tagged and assessments were carried out 14, 17, 20, 23, 27, and 31 days later. Pigments synthesis, distribution and accumulation were uniform among leaflet sections (basal, median and apical). Chlorophyll (Chl) a, Chl b, Chl (a+b), and total carotenoids (Car) concentrations were significantly increased after 27 days from metaphyll, and the most expressive increases were parallel to lower specific leaflet area. Chl a/b was lower on day 14 and it was increased on subsequent days. Negative net photosynthesis rate (PN), and the lowest stomatal conductance (gs) and transpiration (E) were registered on day 14, following significant increases on subsequent days. The Chl (a+b) and Chl a effects on PN were more expressive until day 20. Intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration ratio (Ci/Ca) was higher on day 14 and lower on subsequent days, and no stomatal limitation to CO2 influx inside leaflets was observed. Leaflet temperature was almost constant (ca. 35°C) during leaflet development. Sucrose and starch concentrations were increased in parallel to increases in PN. Altogether, these results highlight the main physiological changes during C. guianensis leaflet expansion and they should be considered in future experiments focusing on factors affecting PN in this species. and F. K. C. Moraes ... [et al.].
Diurnal variations in net photosynthetic rate (PN), transpiration rate (E), stomatal conductance (gs), internal CO2 concentration (Ci), and water use efficiency (WUE) were studied on individual leaves of coffee plants to determine the effect of climatic factors on photosynthetic capacity. PN and E showed bimodal behaviour with the maximum values of PN at mid-morning. At noon, under saturating photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and high leaf temperature (Tl), PN declined. In the afternoon (14:00), PN slightly recovered in association with a decrease in Tl and in leaf-to-air vapour pressure deficit (VPD). Reductions in E during the morning were associated with decreases in gs. Higher WUE in the morning was related to higher PN and lower E. The reverse occurred in the afternoon. Goudriaan's simulation model, adapted for coffee canopy photosynthesis, was tested at the level of whole plant (Ppl). Three methods were used: (a) Whole plant net photosynthesis (Ppl) under semi-controlled conditions in a chamber. (b) Ppl estimation following Goudriaan's method (Gaussian integration) of instantaneous PN in single leaves at three canopy depths and at three different hours assuming a photosynthesis unimodal behaviour. (c) Ppl using Goudriaan's method but at five different hours according to the bimodal behaviour reported above. Results of Ppl estimates using Goudriaan's model adapted for coffee canopy confirm the observed Ppl bimodal behaviour with high fitness degree of the measured whole plant photosynthesis. The high fitness found among observed and simulated data indicates that the modified model may be used as a subroutine for the general simulation model of coffee crop growth. and L. F. Gómez ... [et al.].
Water availability is one of the most important limiting factors in agriculture worldwide, particularly in arid and semiarid regions. Six spring wheat genotypes, i.e. three UK cultivars Cadenza, Paragon, and Xi-19 and three synthetic-derived lines L-22, L-24, and L-38, were grown in a phytotron under well-watered (until 40 days after sowing) and drought conditions. The aim of the study was to evaluate the traits related to photosynthetic capacity (net photosynthesis rate, stomatal conductance, internal CO2 concentration, transpiration rate, carboxylation capacity, instantaneous and intrinsic water-use efficiency) and plant biomass production in the cultivars and synthetic derivatives of wheat genotypes under well-watered and water-limited conditions. Genotypic variations in gas-exchange traits including net photosynthetic rate, carboxylation capacity, instantaneous water-use efficiency, and biomass yield were found amongst genotypes. Drought significantly reduced the total dry matter per plant. The synthetic derivatives L-22 and L-24 showed higher performance of stomata for most of the stomatal aperture characteristics. Total dry matter was positively related to net photosynthetic rate and to instantaneous and intrinsic water-use efficiencies. Finally, net photosynthetic rate was also positively related to stomatal conductance and transpiration rate under both the well-watered and water-limited drought conditions., S. Sikder, J. Foulkes, H. West, J. De Silva, O. Gaju, A. Greenland, P. Howell., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Spartina maritima (Curtis) Fernald, Spartina densiflora Brong, Arthrocnemum perenne (Miller) Moss, and Arthrocnemum fruticosum (L.) Moq are very frequent halophytes on the coasts of SW Europe. The first two are perennial Gramineae with C4 metabolism; the last two are perennial Chenopodiaceae with C3 metabolism. Controlled garden experiments were carried out with the four species to compare their physiological response, i.e., water potential (Ψ), net photosynthetic rate (PN), transpiration rate (E), stomatal conductance (gs), intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci), and chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem (PS) 2 under saline and non-saline conditions. S. maritima behaves as an osmoconformer species, the other three as osmoregulators. In the four species, PN, E, and gs improved following freshwater irrigation. The variations in PN might be related with biochemical changes (which appear not to affect PS2), but not with significant stomatal fluctuations, which are associated with a lower water use efficiency in the case of Arthrocnemum. The species were segregated into two groups (not depending on their C3 or C4 photosynthetic pathway), in relation with the topographic level of this species in natural conditions: the relative responses of PN in S. maritima and A. perenne were lower than those of S. densiflora and A. fruticosum. The salt-tolerance index supports such segregation. S. densiflora demonstrated the best competitive possibilities against salt-tolerant glycophytes, with its more flexible response in saline or brackish environments, which explains its spreading along the rivers draining into the estuaries of the SW Iberian Peninsula. and F. J. J. Nieva ... [et al.].
Periodic flooding of trees in tropical floodplains and reservoirs where water levels fluctuate is a common phenomenon. The effects of flooding and subsequent recovery on gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence and growth responses of Melaleuca alternifolia seedlings, a tall shrub species used in floodplain and reservoir forest restoration in southern China, were studied during a grow season (from March to December in 2007). M. alternifolia seedlings were flooded for 180 days, drained and left to recover for another 60 days. Survival rates of the seedlings were 100% during the 180-day flooding period. Chlorophyll (Chl) content, net photosynthetic rate
(PN), stomatal conductance (gs), and transpiration rate (E) of the flooded seedlings were all significantly lower than those of the control. Significant reductions of photochemical quenching coefficient (qp) and increases of nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) in the flooded seedlings were observed. However, there were no significant differences in the maximal quantum yield of PSII photochemistry (Fv/Fm) between treatments. All seedlings survived during the two-month recovery period after the flooded treatment was drained, and the biomass and height of the recovered seedlings approached those of the control at the end of the experiment. During the first-month recovery period, Chl content, PN, gs and E in the recovered seedlings were all obviously low, then increased gradually and rose to the levels similar to the control by the end of the experiment. Quenching analysis revealed significant reductions of qp and increments of NPQ in the recovered seedlings at the beginning of draining, and a nearly complete recovery for both parameters by the end of the experiment. However, Fv/Fm of the recovered seedlings did not differ significantly from the control during the recovery period. Our study demonstrated that M. alternifolia seedlings can survive and grow through 180 days of flooding with a subsequent 60-day recovery period in drained conditions, indicating that seedlings of this species would be suitable for afforestation in areas exposed to intermittent flooding. and Y. X. Ying ... [et al.].
Leaf gas exchange characteristics were measured in twenty woody species that differ in succession status ranging from pioneer species (PS) to late succession species (LS) in a Brazilian rain-reforestation ecosystem. Photon-saturated photosynthetic rate, calculated per either a leaf area (PNA) or a dry mass (PNM) basis, differed among species. PNA and PNM were highest in PS and lowest in LS. Variation among species was 3-fold (from 7 to 23 μmol m-2 s-1) for PNA, and 5-fold (from 50 to 275 μmol kg-2 s-1) for PNM. The highest PNA (23 μmol m-2 s-1) and PNM (275 μmol kg-2 s-1) values were recorded in PS Croton urucurana, while the lowest PNA (7 μmol m-2 s-1) and PNM (50 μmol kg-2 s-1) values were recorded in LS Aspidosperma cylindrocarpon. A considerable overlap was recorded between PS and LS in values of stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration rate (E), and leaf mass to area ratio (ALM). However, C. urucurana also showed highest gs and E. PNM was highly correlated with ALM in both PS and LS (r=-0.75 and -0.90, respectively). The high values of instantaneous transpiration efficiency (ITE) and intrinsic water use efficiency (WUEi) were also observed in the PS when compared with the LS. and A. Nogueira ... [et al.].
Water deficit is an important exogenous factor that enhances the influx of sucrose into sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) stem internodes during ripening, when photosynthetic ability in supplying sinks is essential. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that drought tolerance in sugarcane is associated with an effective antioxidant protection during the ripening phase that might maintain a favorable redox balance in chloroplasts and protect photosynthesis under drought conditions. Two commercial sugarcane varieties, IACSP94-2094 (tolerant) and IACSP96-2042 (sensitive), with contrasting behavior under water deficit, were subjected to water withholding during the ripening stage. Our results revealed that the tolerant variety was less affected by water deficit, maintaining photosynthesis for a longer period and showing a faster recovery after rehydration as compared to the sensitive one. As consequence, the tolerant variety faced lesser excess of light energy at PSII. The maintenance of photosynthesis under water deficit and its fast recovery after rehydration resulted in the lower leaf H2O2 concentration and favorable redox status in the drought-tolerant genotype, which was associated with stimulation of superoxide dismutase during ripening. Our results also revealed that ferric superoxide dismutase isoforms were strongly enhanced under drought conditions, playing an important role in chloroplast redox homeostasis., C. R. G. Sales, P. E. R. Marchiori, R. S. Machado, A. V. Fontenele, E. C. Machado, J. A. G. Silveira, R. V. Ribeiro., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
To quantify photosynthetic response of wheat to the combination of a fungal brown rust infection and a post-infection drought, four treatments were compared: no stress (control), fungal stress (FS), water stress (WS), and twofold stress (WS×FS). Predawn leaf water potential (Ψwp) was similar in FS and WS treatments over a 3-week period. In the WS treatment, net photosynthetic rate (PN) and stomata CO2 conductance (gs) diminished concomitantly with a constant intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) close to 200 µmol mol-1. In the FS treatment, a reduction of PN occurred with an increase in respiration rate (doubling of the CO2 compensation concentration) and in Ci but with no water loss modification. Healthy leaves of infected plants (FS) showed a reduction of PN as well, with constant gs and increased Ci. In the twofold stress treatment (WS×FS), leaves showed reduced PN in relation to the lower Ψwp. Deleterious effects of both drought and fungal infection on the final area of leaves and dry matter were additive. and O. Bethenod, L. Huber, H. Slimi.
The photosynthetic responses to salt stress were examined in a wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Asakaze)-barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Manas) 7H addition line having elevated salt tolerance and compared to the parental wheat genotype. For this purpose, increasing NaCl concentrations up to 300 mM were applied and followed by a 7-day recovery period. Up to moderate salt stress (200 mM NaCl), forcible stomatal closure, parallel with a reduction in the net assimilation rate (PN), was only observed in wheat, but not in the 7H addition line or barley. Since the photosynthetic electron transport processes of wheat were not affected by NaCl, the impairment in PN could largely be accounted for the salt-induced decline in stomatal conductance (gs), accompanied by depressed intercellular CO2 concentration and carboxylation efficiency. Both, PN and nonstomatal limitation factors (Lns) were practically unaffected by moderate salt stress in barley and in the 7H addition line due to the sustained gs, which might be an efficient strategy to maintain the efficient photosynthetic activity and biomass production. At 300 mM NaCl, both PN and gs decreased significantly in all the genotypes, but the changes in PN and Lns in the 7H addition line were more favourable similar to those in wheat. The downregulation of photosynthetic electron transport processes around PSII, accompanied by increases in the quantum yield of regulated energy dissipation and of the donor side limitation of PSI without damage to PSII, was observed in the addition line and barley during severe stress. Incomplete recovery of PN was observed in the 7H addition line as a result of declined PSII activity probably caused by enhanced cyclic electron flow around PSI. These results suggest that the better photosynthetic tolerance to moderate salt stress of barley can be manifested in the 7H addition line which may be a suitable candidate for improving salt tolerance of wheat., D. Szopkó, É. Darkó, I. Molnár, K. Kruppa, B. Háló, A. Vojtkó,
M. Molnár-Láng, S. Dulai., and Obsahuje bibliografii
The responses of photosynthesis and growth to increasing CO2 concentration ([CO2]) were investigated in Hippophae gyantsensis and H. rhamnoides subsp. yunnanensis, which are endemic at the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and phylogenetically related, but distributed parapatrically in divergent regions. Seedlings of the two species were grown at ambient [AC; 360 μmol(CO2) mol-1] and elevated [EC; 720 μmol(CO2) mol-1] [CO2] in growth chambers. The responses to EC were significantly different between the two species. EC induced an increase in photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, intrinsic water-use efficiency, apparent quantum efficiency, total dry mass, and a decrease in photorespiration rate, maximum carboxylation rate of Rubisco, and maximum electron transport rate in H. gyantsensis compared to those in H. rhamnoides subsp. yunnanensis. Moreover, a significant increase in leaf nitrogen content and a decrease in root/shoot ratio was also observed in H. gyantsensis. H. gyantsensis showed a significantly higher specific leaf area than that of H. rhamnoides through treatments. Relative to H. rhamnoides subsp. yunnanensis, H. gyantsensis showed a greater potential to increase photosynthesis and growth to cope with the increasing [CO2] and it might expand its distribution range in the future., F. Ma, T. T. Xu, M. F. Ji, C. M. Zhao., and Obsahuje seznam literatury