Effects of different stressors on the PSII photochemical efficiency and application to sporeling transportation in cultured young sporophytes of Undaria pinnatifida

Author(s):  
Yoichi Sato ◽  
Daisuke Saito ◽  
Gregory N. Nishihara ◽  
Ryuta Terada
2012 ◽  
Vol 518-523 ◽  
pp. 189-193
Author(s):  
Xiang Ming Chen ◽  
Song Jin

This paper studies the effects of the Juglone on improving the photosynthesis of the peony growing in the summer field, and alleviating the photosynthesis inhibition in the two months of July and August, by using the 0.06mg/L Juglone extracted from the C.cathayensis exocarp, one kind of the forestry waste, to insufflate the peony leaf surface.The research results show that ,by comparing the peony leaf after procession with the control group, the Pn summit values of the photosynthetic rate improve by 10.5% and 12.8% respectively, and the photosynthesis noon-break is greatly shortened; the stomatal conductance variance of the leaf is not big, but the Ci content decreases significantly; the PSII photochemical efficiency of Fv/Fm reduces by 20% and 26% respectively; ΦPSII decreases by 18.1% and 19.9% respectively;between the time period 10 am and 1 pm, when the sunlight is the most sufficient, the contents of the chlorophyll qP decrease by 10% and 11.6% respectively,and the contents of the NPQ increase by 17.3% and 14.3% respectively. The research results show that Juglone could greatly reduce the summer sunlight harm on the photosynthetic system of the peony leaf chloroplast, and improve the light utilization rate of the peony leaf.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 1161-1172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rongliang Jia ◽  
Yun Zhao ◽  
Yanhong Gao ◽  
Rong Hui ◽  
Haotian Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract. Biocrust moss is an essential soil surface bio-cover. It can represent the latest succession stage among the diverse range of surface-dwelling cryptogams (e.g., cyanobacteria, green algae, and lichen, which are also referred to as biocrusts), and it can make a major contribution to soil stability and fertility in many arid sandy desert ecosystems. The soil surface represents a very large ecological niche that is poikilohydric in nature. Biocrust moss is therefore highly susceptible to drought and sand burial, which are two ubiquitous stressors in arid sandy deserts. However, little information is available regarding the mechanism by which biocrust moss can survive and flourish in these habitats when stressed simultaneously by the two stressors. The combined effects of drought and sand burial were evaluated in a field experiment using the predominant biocrust moss, Bryum argenteum Hedw., in the Tengger Desert, China. Drought was simulated by applying distilled water in three artificial rainfall regimes at 8-day intervals in spring and autumn: 4 and 6 mm (average rainfall, control), 2 and 3 mm (double drought), and 1 and 1.5 mm (4-fold drought), respectively. The effect of sand burial was determined by applying six treatments, i.e., sand depths of 0 (control), 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 10 mm. The four parameters of chlorophyll a content, PSII photochemical efficiency, regeneration potential, and shoot upgrowth were evaluated in the moss. It was found that the combined effects of drought and sand burial did not exacerbate the single negative effects of the four parameters tested. Drought significantly ameliorated the negative effects of deep-sand burial on the retention of chlorophyll a content, PSII photochemical efficiency, and the regeneration potential of B. argenteum. Sand burial diminished and even reversed the negative effects of drought on the maintenance of chlorophyll a content, PSII photochemical efficiency, and regeneration potential. Although drought and sand burial imposed an additive negative effect on shoot upgrowth, which suggested a trade-off between growth ability and stress tolerance, their mutually antagonistic effect on the physiological vigor of B. argenteum provided an opportunity for the biocrust moss to overcome the two co-occurring stressors. In addition to providing a strong stress tolerance, drought and sand burial may provide an important mechanism for the biodiversity maintenance of biocrust mosses in arid sandy ecosystems.


Botany ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Vitale ◽  
Carmen Arena ◽  
Amalia Virzo De Santo ◽  
Nicola D’Ambrosio

Gas exchange and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements were performed simultaneously on leaves of Phillyrea angustifolia L. to assess the effects of heat stress (30 min at 40 °C) on photosynthesis and photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency of plants grown at ambient CO2 and exposed to an elevated CO2 concentration (800 µmol·mol–1) and 300 µmol photons·m–2·s–1. No significant difference was found in the heat-induced decreases of net photosynthesis (PN), quantum yield of PSII electron transport (ΦPSII), and maximum PSII photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) between plants exposed to ambient and elevated CO2 concentrations, showing that elevated CO2 was not able to reduce the potential for photoinhibition at high temperatures under moderate light conditions. The heat-induced decrease of PN was higher than that of ΦPSII indicating that reductive power was more utilized in non-assimilatory processes than in CO2 fixation at both CO2 treatments. This result suggested that impairment of the Calvin cycle rather than electron transport inhibition was the main cause of the limitation in CO2 fixation.


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