Abstract

Abstract A modular assimilation chamber (MAC) was developed for rapid examination of CO2 exchange rate (CER) of multiple turfgrass replicates. Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L. ‘Enoble’) and tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb. ‘Houndog’) were grown in Cone-tainers with attached base plates under greenhouse conditions. A chamber top was sealed to the base plate to complete the MAC. It then was used under laboratory conditions to measure CER by an open, differential CO2 method or by closed chamber-syringe sampling method. The two-module concept provided a relatively simple tool for making rapid, multiple measurements of CER when used as part of a closed system. However, a larger chamber volume is needed for closed system measurements because: 1) CER values were significantly larger with the open system, rapid drops in CO2 concentration occurred during closed-system measurements, and CER measurements after 2 min of closure were significantly lower than those made after 1 min of closure.

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