FIELD INVESTIGATIONS IN WELWITSCHIA-MIRABILIS DURING A SEVERE DROUGHT.2. INFLUENCE OF LEAF AGE, LEAF TEMPERATURE AND IRRADIANCE ON PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND PHOTOINHIBITION
Wb. Herppich et al., FIELD INVESTIGATIONS IN WELWITSCHIA-MIRABILIS DURING A SEVERE DROUGHT.2. INFLUENCE OF LEAF AGE, LEAF TEMPERATURE AND IRRADIANCE ON PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND PHOTOINHIBITION, Flora, 192(2), 1997, pp. 165-174
During drought Welwitschia mirabilis, a desert plant indigenous to the
west coast deserts of southern Africa exhibited a two-peaked pattern
of diurnal CO2 exchange, with carbon losses for most time of the light
period over all age classes of the approximately 5 years old leaf Lea
f conductances for water vapour and water potentials were high only du
ring the cooler, humid morning and declined thereafter with increasing
temperatures, water vapour deficits of the air and irradiation. Altho
ugh there was no gradient in water deficit over the whole leaf, leaf c
onductances were lower and carbon losses higher in 4 to 5 years old le
af sections. The latter also showed substantially reduced CO2 uptake c
apacity and quantum yield. In those leaf parts photoinhibition, estima
ted from the diurnal reduction in the ratio of dark adapted variable (
F-V) to maximum fluorescence (F-M), was about 55% larger than in the y
oung (approximate to 1 year old) tissue. The mature mid-leaf tissue be
haved intermediate. Inhibition of F-V/F-M was due to the reduction of
F-M, the dark adapted initial fluorescence (F-0) increased only slight
ly. q(1), the slowly relaxing component of non-photochemical quenching
, was only 26% higher in the older leaf parts. F-0-quenching (q(0)) wa
s low and constant in the young tissue but increased when q(1) was ver
y high in the old one. The sum of q(1) and q(0) was linearily correlat
ed with the diurnal inhibition of F-V/F-M. Except in the morning hours
carbon exchange followed any changes in leaf temperature, while varia
tions in F-V/F-M and q(1) were due to the synergism of temperature and
radiation.