Photosynthetic and respiratory acclimation and growth response of antarctic vascular plants to contrasting temperature regimes

被引:119
|
作者
Xiong, FSS
Mueller, EC
Day, TA [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Dept Plant Biol, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[2] Arizona State Univ, Photosynth Ctr, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
Antarctica; Colobanthus quitensis; Deschampsia antarctica; growth; photosynthesis; respiration; temperature; warming;
D O I
10.2307/2656856
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Air temperatures have risen over the past 50 yr along the Antarctic Peninsula, and it is unclear what impact this is having on Antarctic plants. We examined the growth response of the Antarctic vascular plants Colobanthus quitensis (Caryophyllaceae) and Deschampsia antarctica (Poaceae) to temperature and also assessed their ability for thermal acclimation, in terms of whole-canopy net photosynthesis (P-n) and dark respiration (R-d), by growing plants for 90 d under three contrasting temperature regimes: 7 degrees C day/7 degrees C night, 17 degrees C day/7 degrees C night, and 20 degrees C day/7 degrees C night (18 h/6 h). These daytime temperatures represent suboptimal (7 degrees C), near-optimal (12 degrees C), and supraoptimal (70 degrees C) temperatures for P-n based on field measurements at the collection site near Palmer Station along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. Plants of both species grown at a daytime temperature of 20 degrees C had greater RGR (relative growth rate) and produced 2.2-3.3 times as much total biomass as plants grown at daytime temperatures of 12 degrees or 7 degrees C. Plants frown at 20 degrees C also produced 2.0-4.1 times as many leaves, 3.4-5.5 times as much total leaf area, and had 1.5-1.6 times the LAR (leaf area ratio; leaf area:total biomass) and 1.1-1.4 times the LMR (leaf mass ratio; leaf mass:total biomass) of plants grown at 12 degrees or 7 degrees C. Greater RGR and biomass production at 20 degrees C appeared primarily due to greater biomass allocation to leaf production in these plants. Rates of P-n (leaf-area basis), when measured at their respective daytime growth temperatures, were highest in plants Brown at 12 degrees C, and rates of plants grown at 20 degrees C were only 58 (C. quitensis) or 64% (D. antarctica) of the rates in plants grown at 12 degrees C. Thus, lower P-n per leaf area in plants grown at 20 degrees C was more than offset by much greater leaf-area production. Rates of whole-canopy P-n (per plant), when measured at their respective daytime growth temperatures, were highest in plants grown at 20 degrees C, and appeared well correlated with differences in RGR and total biomass among treatments. Colonbanthus quitensis exhibited only a slight ability for relative acclimation of P-n (leaf-area basis) as the optimal temperature for P-n increased from 8.4 degrees to 10.3 degrees to 11.5 degrees C as daytime growth temperatures increased from 7 degrees to 12 degrees to 20 degrees C. There was no evidence for relative acclimation of P-n in D. antarctica, as plants grown at all three temperature regimes had a similar optimal temperature (10 degrees C) for P-n. There was no evidence for absolute acclimation of P-n in either species, as rates of P-n in plants grown at a daytime temperature of 12 degrees C were higher than those of plants grown at daytime telnperaturcs of 7 degrees or 20 degrees C, when measured at their respective growth temperatures. The poor ability for photosynthetic acclimation in these species may be associated with the relatively stable maritime temperature regime during the growing season along the Peninsula. In contrast to P-n, both species exhibited full acclimation of R-d, and rates of R-d on a leaf-area basis were similar among treatments when measured at their respective daytime growth temperature. Our results suggest that in the absence of interspecific competition, continued warming along the Peninsula will lead to improved vegetative growth of these species due to (1) greater biomass allocation to leaf-area production (as opposed to improved rates of P-n per leaf area) and (2) their ability to acclimate R-d, such that respiratory losses per leaf area do not increase under higher temperature regimes.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:700 / 710
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Changes in Photosynthetic Electron Transport during Leaf Senescence in Two Barley Varieties Grown in Contrasting Growth Regimes
    Shimakawa, Ginga
    Roach, Thomas
    Krieger-Liszkay, Anja
    PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY, 2020, 61 (11) : 1986 - 1994
  • [42] Acclimation of photosynthetic temperature optima of temperate and boreal tree species in response to experimental forest warming
    Sendall, Kerrie M.
    Reich, Peter B.
    Zhao, Changming
    Hou Jihua
    Wei, Xiaorong
    Stefanski, Artur
    Rice, Karen
    Rich, Roy L.
    Montgomery, Rebecca A.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2015, 21 (03) : 1342 - 1357
  • [43] Photosynthetic acclimation of young sweet orange trees to elevated growth CO2 and temperature
    Vu, JCV
    Newman, YC
    Allen, LH
    Gallo-Meagher, M
    Zhang, MQ
    JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 159 (02) : 147 - 157
  • [44] RESPONSE OF RICE PLANTS TO CONSTANT AND CYCLIC SUBMERGED SOIL TEMPERATURE REGIMES
    GHAUDHAR.TN
    CHILDYAL, BP
    PLANT AND SOIL, 1971, 34 (02) : 493 - &
  • [45] Common temperature - growth dependency and acclimation response in three herbivorous protists
    Franze, Gayantonia
    Menden-Deuer, Susanne
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2020, 634 : 1 - 13
  • [46] Photosynthetic activity and acclimation ability of pea plants to low and high temperature treatment as studied by means of chlorophyll fluorescence
    Georgieva, K
    Lichtenthaler, HK
    JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 155 (03) : 416 - 423
  • [47] Acclimation in long-distance migrant birds that routinely move between contrasting temperature regimes:: Experimental studies on red knots
    Piersma, T.
    Vezina, F.
    COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY A-MOLECULAR & INTEGRATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 2007, 146 (04): : S206 - S206
  • [48] Response of superoxide dismutase isoenzymes in tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum) during thermo-acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus
    Camejo, Daymi
    Marti, Maria del C.
    Nicolas, Emilio
    Alarcon, Juan J.
    Jimenez, Ana
    Sevilla, Francisca
    PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM, 2007, 131 (03) : 367 - 377
  • [49] Differential photosynthetic acclimation pattern to limiting growth-irradiance in two types of C4 plants
    Sailaja, MV
    Das, VSR
    PHOTOSYNTHETICA, 2000, 38 (02) : 267 - 273
  • [50] Growth response of onion varieties to varying photoperiod and temperature regimes
    Bachie, Oli
    McGiffen, Milton
    HORTSCIENCE, 2007, 42 (04) : 852 - 852