THE INFLUENCE OF LIGHT QUALITY AND CARBON-DIOXIDE ENRICHMENT ON THE GROWTH AND PHYSIOLOGY OF SEEDLINGS OF 3 CONIFER SPECIES .2. PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES

Citation
J. Hoddinott et R. Scott, THE INFLUENCE OF LIGHT QUALITY AND CARBON-DIOXIDE ENRICHMENT ON THE GROWTH AND PHYSIOLOGY OF SEEDLINGS OF 3 CONIFER SPECIES .2. PHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSES, Canadian journal of botany, 74(3), 1996, pp. 391-402
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00084026
Volume
74
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
391 - 402
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4026(1996)74:3<391:TIOLQA>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Pinus banksiana, Picea mariana, and Picea glauca were grown at 350, 70 0, or 1050 mu L . L(-1) CO2 and either high or low red/far-red quantum flux ratios. After a 16-week, long day growth period, seedlings were subjected sequentially to short daylengths, then short days with low t emperatures. Various physiological parameters were determined at the e nd of each treatment phase to monitor how those treatments influenced the onset of seedling dormancy. After the long day treatments, high ra tios increased the total chlorophyll content and reduced the original level of chlorophyll fluorescence and the shoot total nonstructural ca rbohydrate content in very shade-intolerant Pinus banksiana. In shade- tolerant Picea mariana, high CO2 levels caused the main effects on the se parameters while neither light quality or CO2 had significant effec ts on them in shade-tolerant Picea glauca. Short days and low temperat ure induced a proportional increase in the partitioning of total nonst ructural carbohydrate to the roots in all species and produced other s pecies and treatment-specific responses.