| Literature DB >> 28313416 |
K J Murray1, J D Tenhunen2, R S Nowak3.
Abstract
The effect of high light intensity on photosynthesis and growth of Sphagnum moss species from Alaskan arctic tundra was studied under field and laboratory conditions. Field experiments consisted of experimental shading of mosses at sites normally exposed to full ambient irradiance, and removal of the vascular plant canopy from above mosses in tundra water track habitats. Moss growth was then monitored in the experimental plots and in adjacent control areas for 50 days from late June to early August 1988. In shaded plots total moss growth was 2-3 times higher than that measured in control plots, while significant reductions in moss growth were found in canopy removal plots. The possibility that photoinhibition of photosynthesis might occur under high-light conditions and affect growth was studied under controlled laboratory conditions with mosses collected from the arctic study site, as well as from a temperate location in the Sierra Nevada, California. After 2 days of high-light treatment (800 μmol photons m-2 s-1) in a controlled environmental chamber, moss photosynthetic capacity was significantly lowered in both arctic and temperate samples, and did not recover during the 14-day experimental period. The observed decrease in photosynthetic capacity was correlated (r 2=0.735, P<0.001) with a decrease in the ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll fluorescence (F v/F m) in arctic and temperate mosses. This relationship indicates photoinhibition of photosynthesis in both arctic and temperate mosses at even moderately high light intensities. It is suggested that susceptibility to photoinhibition and failure to photoacclimate to higher light intensities in Sphagnum spp. may be related to low tissue nitrogen levels in these exclusively ombrotrophic plants. Photoinhibition of photosynthesis leading to lowered annual carbon gain in Sphagnum mosses may be an important factor affecting CO2 flux at the ecosystem level, given the abundance of these plants in Alaskan tussock tundra.Entities:
Keywords: Photoinhibition; Photosynthesis; Production; Sphagnum moss
Year: 1993 PMID: 28313416 DOI: 10.1007/BF00317733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225