Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10876990 Journal of Plant Physiology 2005 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Potato plants (Solanum tuberosum cv. Bintje) were grown in open top chambers under ambient (400 μL L−1) and elevated CO2 (720 μL L−1). After 50 days one half of each group was transferred to the other CO2 concentration and the effects were studied in relation to leaf age (old, middle-aged and young leaves) in each of the four groups. Under long-term exposure to elevated CO2, photosynthesis increased between 10% and 40% compared to ambient CO2. A subsequent shift of the same plants to ambient CO2 caused a 20-40% decline in photosynthetic rate, which was most pronounced in young leaves. After shifting from long-term ambient to elevated CO2, photosynthesis also increased most strongly in young leaves (90%); these experiments show that photosynthesis was downregulated in the upper young fully expanded leaves of potato growing long-term under elevated CO2. Soluble sugar content in all leaf classes under long-term exposure was stable irrespective of the CO2 treatment, however under elevated CO2 young leaves showed a strongly increased starch accumulation (up to 400%). In all leaf classes starch levels dropped in response to the shift from 720 to 400 μL L−1 approaching ambient CO2 levels. After the shift to 720 μL L−1, sucrose and starch levels increased, principally in young leaves. There is clear evidence that leaves of different age vary in their responses to changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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