Astrid Fridell, Göran Wallin, Curt Almqvist, Lasse Tarvainen
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Height growth was greater under longer day length while bud development occurred faster both under longer day length and higher growth temperature. Growth temperature did not have a significant effect on the light-saturated photosynthetic rate but higher growth temperature resulted in lower dark respiration rate. Cuttings in the low growth temperature treatment exhibited higher apparent quantum yields indicating that lower growth temperature benefited net carbon uptake under low light availability, such as the conditions experienced by seedlings growing in the forest understory. Day length did not influence the thermal acclimation of shoot-scale gas exchange. The two populations from different origins did not differ in the measured parameters, except for a higher dark respiration rate in the high latitude cuttings. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
预计北方乔木的生长将受益于全球气温上升,因为它们的光合作用速率提高,生长季节延长。然而,由于光周期与气候变化无关,它可能会限制较长生长季节带来的预期生长效益,从而可能限制北方树木对变暖的生理反应。本研究对两个纬度来源的2年生挪威云杉(Picea abies)扦插进行生长室实验,研究日照长度(20/4小时vs 14/10小时光照/黑暗)和温度(25/20°C vs 15/10°C昼/夜)对幼苗高度生长、芽发育和苗级气体交换的影响。日长越长,植株生长越快;日长越长,生长温度越高,芽发育越快。生长温度对光饱和光合速率无显著影响,但生长温度越高,暗呼吸速率越低。低生长温度处理的插枝表现出更高的表观量子产率,表明低生长温度有利于低光有效度条件下的净碳吸收,例如森林林下幼苗所经历的条件。日照长度对小尺度气体交换的热驯化没有影响。不同来源的两个种群在测量参数上没有差异,除了高纬度扦插的暗呼吸速率更高。总的来说,虽然日照长度不影响光合过程的热驯化,但它似乎限制了植物的高度生长和芽发育,从而降低了气候变暖导致生长季节延长的潜在性能效益。
Photoperiod does not affect thermal acclimation of shoot-scale gas exchange but is important for shoot development in cuttings of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karst).
The growth of boreal trees is expected to benefit from increasing global temperatures through enhanced photosynthetic rates and longer growing seasons. However, since photoperiod is independent of climate change, it may limit the expected growth benefits from a longer growing season and could thus constrain boreal trees' physiological responses to warming. We carried out a growth chamber experiment on two-year-old Norway spruce (Picea abies) cuttings from two latitudinal origins to investigate the interaction between day length (20/4 hours vs 14/10 hours light/dark) and enhanced temperatures (25/20 °C vs 15/10 °C day/night) on height growth, bud development and shoot-scale gas exchange. Height growth was greater under longer day length while bud development occurred faster both under longer day length and higher growth temperature. Growth temperature did not have a significant effect on the light-saturated photosynthetic rate but higher growth temperature resulted in lower dark respiration rate. Cuttings in the low growth temperature treatment exhibited higher apparent quantum yields indicating that lower growth temperature benefited net carbon uptake under low light availability, such as the conditions experienced by seedlings growing in the forest understory. Day length did not influence the thermal acclimation of shoot-scale gas exchange. The two populations from different origins did not differ in the measured parameters, except for a higher dark respiration rate in the high latitude cuttings. Overall, while day length did not affect the thermal acclimation of photosynthetic processes, it appears to constrain height growth and bud development, thereby reducing the potential performance benefit of a warming-induced lengthening of the growing season.
期刊介绍:
Tree Physiology promotes research in a framework of hierarchically organized systems, measuring insight by the ability to link adjacent layers: thus, investigated tree physiology phenomenon should seek mechanistic explanation in finer-scale phenomena as well as seek significance in larger scale phenomena (Passioura 1979). A phenomenon not linked downscale is merely descriptive; an observation not linked upscale, might be trivial. Physiologists often refer qualitatively to processes at finer or coarser scale than the scale of their observation, and studies formally directed at three, or even two adjacent scales are rare. To emphasize the importance of relating mechanisms to coarser scale function, Tree Physiology will highlight papers doing so particularly well as feature papers.