PHOTOSYNTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS OF SUN VERSUS SHADE PLANTS OF ENCELIA-FARINOSA AS AFFECTED BY PHOTOSYNTHETIC PHOTON FLUX-DENSITY, INTERCELLULAR CO2 CONCENTRATION, LEAF WATER POTENTIAL, AND LEAF TEMPERATURE
Hh. Zhang et al., PHOTOSYNTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS OF SUN VERSUS SHADE PLANTS OF ENCELIA-FARINOSA AS AFFECTED BY PHOTOSYNTHETIC PHOTON FLUX-DENSITY, INTERCELLULAR CO2 CONCENTRATION, LEAF WATER POTENTIAL, AND LEAF TEMPERATURE, Australian journal of plant physiology, 22(5), 1995, pp. 833-841
Limitations to photosynthesis were examined for Encelia farinosa Torre
y et A.Gray, a common C-3 sub-shrub in arid regions of south-western U
nited States, for plants grown in full sunlight and those shaded to 40
% of full sunlight. The initial slopes of CO2 assimilation (A) versus
intercellular CO2 concentration curves were similar for sun and shade
plants at low photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) but higher for
sun plants as the PPFD increased, indicating a greater limitation by
carboxylation capacity in shade plants. Sun plants had higher electron
transport rates but a lower ratio of electron transport capacity to c
arboxylation capacity (V-max); the ratio was inversely proportional to
mesophyll conductance for both sun and shade plants. Dark respiration
decreased with decreasing leaf water potential (psi(1)) in sun plants
but remained unchanged in shade plants; day respiration was little af
fected by PPFD for both sun and shade plants. Stomatal conductance (g(
s)) was similar for sun and shade plants under high soil-moisture cond
itions but higher in sun plants as psi(1) decreased; for all data cons
idered together, changes in the leaf-air vapour pressure difference ac
counted for 71% of the variation in g(s). The lower A for shade plants
of E. farinosa apparently resulted from a lower V-max, as well as a l
ower g(s) when plants were under water stress.