RESPONSES OF WHITE CLOVER TO GASEOUS-POLLUTANTS AND ACID MIST - IMPLICATIONS FOR SETTING CRITICAL LEVELS AND LOADS

Citation
Tw. Ashenden et al., RESPONSES OF WHITE CLOVER TO GASEOUS-POLLUTANTS AND ACID MIST - IMPLICATIONS FOR SETTING CRITICAL LEVELS AND LOADS, New phytologist, 130(1), 1995, pp. 89-96
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
0028646X
Volume
130
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
89 - 96
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-646X(1995)130:1<89:ROWCTG>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
White clover plants (Trifolium repens L. cv.'Grasslands Huia') were ex posed to combinations of gaseous pollutants and acid mists for 15 wk. The treatments were (a) charcoal-filtered air (control), (b) 40 ppb SO 2+40 ppb NO2, (c) 40 ppb 0(3) with additional peaks of 2 x 3 h at 80 p pb and 1 x 1 h at 110 ppb 0(3) and (d) SO2+NO2+O-3 (a combination of t reatments b and c), these being combined with acid mist treatments (6 mm wk(-1)) with solutions at pHs of 2.5, 3.5, 4.5 and 5.6. All gaseous pollution treatments resulted in substantial reductions in plant dry weights with additive effects of SO2+NO2 and O-3 in the SO2+NO2+O-3 tr eatment. There was a lower dry weight, averaged over all gas pollution treatments, for plants exposed to pH 2.5 compared with pH 4.5 or pH 5 .6 mists. An interactive effect of gas x mist treatments revealed that effects of acid mists on plant dry weights were overridden by the mor e toxic O-3 and SO2+NO2+O-3 gas exposures. Net photosynthesis was redu ced in plants exposed to pH 2.5 and pH 3.5 mists compared with plants exposed to pH 5.6 mist. Rates of stomatal conductance were reduced by exposure to the gaseous pollution treatments but not to acid mists. Wa ter loss was greater after 55 h for leaves detached from plants expose d to all gaseous pollution treatments compared with ones from control plants. There was a greater loss of water from detached leaves exposed to pH 2.5 compared with pH 5.6 mist. The quantities (loads) of S+N in gaseous form resulting in decreased growth of T. repens were calculat ed to be much lower than those applied in mists with no adverse effect s. It is concluded that the concepts of critical levels and critical l oads of pollutants need considerable refinement for realistic assessme nts of the threat of pollutants to vegetation.