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Interactive Effect of Elevated CO2 and Reduced Summer Precipitation on Photosynthesis is Species-Specific: The Case Study with Soil-Planted Norway Spruce and Sessile Oak in a Mountainous Forest Plot

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    0541723 - ÚVGZ 2022 RIV CH eng J - Journal Article
    Ofori-Amanfo, Kojo Kwakye - Klem, Karel - Veselá, Barbora - Holub, Petr - Agyei, Thomas - Marek, Michal V. - Grace, John - Urban, Otmar
    Interactive Effect of Elevated CO2 and Reduced Summer Precipitation on Photosynthesis is Species-Specific: The Case Study with Soil-Planted Norway Spruce and Sessile Oak in a Mountainous Forest Plot.
    Forests. Roč. 12, č. 1 (2021), č. článku 42. E-ISSN 1999-4907
    R&D Projects: GA MŠMT(CZ) EF16_019/0000797; GA ČR(CZ) GA18-23702S
    Research Infrastructure: CzeCOS III - 90123
    Institutional support: RVO:86652079
    Keywords : chlorophyll fluorescence * climate change * electron transport rate * elevated carbon dioxide * photosynthetic acclimation * tree physiology * Rubisco carboxylation rate * water availability
    OECD category: Forestry
    Impact factor: 3.282, year: 2021
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/12/1/42

    We investigated how reduced summer precipitation modifies photosynthetic responses of two model tree species-coniferous Norway spruce and broadleaved sessile oak-to changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration. Saplings were grown under mountainous conditions for two growing seasons at ambient (400 mu mol CO2 mol(-1)) and elevated (700 mu mol CO2 mol(-1)) CO2 concentration. Half were not exposed to precipitation during the summer (June-August). After two seasons of cultivation under modified conditions, basic photosynthetic characteristics including light-saturated rate of CO2 assimilation (A(max)), stomatal conductance (G(Smax)), and water use efficiency (WUE) were measured under their growth CO2 concentrations together with in vivo carboxylation rate (V-C) and electron transport rate (J) derived from CO2-response curves at saturating light. An increase in A(max) under elevated CO2 was observed in oak saplings, whereas it remained unchanged or slightly declined in Norway spruce, indicating a down-regulation of photosynthesis. Such acclimation was associated with an acclimation of both J and V-C. Both species had increased WUE under elevated CO2 although, in well-watered oaks, WUE remained unchanged. Significant interactive effects of tree species, CO2 concentration, and water availability on gas-exchange parameters (A(max), G(Smax), WUE) were observed, while there was no effect on biochemical (V-C, J) and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. The assimilation capacity (A(sat), CO2 assimilation rate at saturating light intensity and CO2 concentration) was substantially reduced in spruce under the combined conditions of water deficiency and elevated CO2, but not in oak. In addition, the stimulatory effect of elevated CO2 on A(max) persisted in oak, but completely diminished in water-limited spruce saplings. Our results suggest a strong species-specific response of trees to reduced summer precipitation under future conditions of elevated CO2 and a limited compensatory effect of elevated CO2 on CO2 uptake under water-limited conditions in coniferous spruce.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0319252

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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