Literature DB >> 34928345

Distinguishing carbon gains from photosynthesis and heterotrophy in C3-hemiparasite-C3-host pairs.

Philipp Giesemann1, Gerhard Gebauer1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Previous carbon stable isotope (13C) analyses have shown for very few C3-hemiparasites utilizing C4- or CAM-hosts the use of two carbon sources, autotrophy and heterotrophy. This 13C approach, however, failed for the frequently occurring C3-C3 parasite-host pairs. Thus, we used hydrogen stable isotope (2H) natural abundances as a substitute for 13C within a C3-Orobanchaceae sequence graded by haustoria complexity and C3-Santalaceae.
METHODS: Parasitic plants and their real or potential host plants as references were collected in Central European lowland and alpine mountain meadows and forests. Parasitic plants included the xylem-feeding holoparasite Lathraea squamaria parasitizing on the same carbon nutrient source (xylem-transported organic carbon compounds) as potentially Pedicularis, Rhinanthus, Bartsia, Melampyrum and Euphrasia hemiparasites. Reference plants were used for an autotrophy-only isotope baseline. A multi-element stable isotope natural abundance approach was applied. KEY
RESULTS: Species-specific heterotrophic carbon gain ranging from 0 to 51 % was estimated by a 2H mixing-model. The sequence in heterotrophic carbon gain mostly met the morphological grading by haustoria complexity: Melampyrum- < Rhinanthus- < Pedicularis-type.
CONCLUSION: Due to higher transpiration and lower water-use efficiency, depletion in 13C, 18O and 2H compared to C3-host plants should be expected for tissues of C3-hemiparasites. However, 2H is counterbalanced by transpiration (2H-depletion) and heterotrophy (2H-enrichment). Progressive 2H-enrichment can be used as a proxy to evaluate carbon gains from hosts.
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990 13C; zzm321990 18O; zzm321990 2H; C3 photosynthesis; Orobanchaceae; Santalaceae; heterotrophy; parasitic plant; stable isotopes; xylem

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 34928345      PMCID: PMC9113100          DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcab153

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Bot        ISSN: 0305-7364            Impact factor:   5.040


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1.  Approaching a revolution in hemiparasitic plant biology? A commentary on 'Distinguishing carbon gains from photosynthesis and heterotrophy in C3-hemiparasite-C3-host-pairs'.

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