Abstract

Leaf tissue CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) shows contrasting dynamics over a diurnal cycle in C3 and Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) plants. However, simultaneous and continuous monitoring of pCO2 and pO2 in C3 and CAM plants under the same conditions was lacking. Our aim was to use a new CO2 microsensor and an existing O2 microsensor for non-destructive measurements of leaf pCO2 and pO2 dynamics to compare a C3 and a CAM plant in an aquatic environment. A new amperometric CO2 microsensor and an O2 microsensor elucidated with high temporal resolution the dynamics in leaf pCO2 and pO2 during light-dark cycles for C3Lobelia dortmanna and CAM Littorella uniflora aquatic plants. Underwater photosynthesis, dark respiration, tissue malate concentrations and sediment CO2 and O2 were also measured. During the dark period, for the C3 plant, pCO2 increased to approx. 3.5 kPa, whereas for the CAM plant CO2 was mostly below 0.05 kPa owing to CO2 sequestration into malate. Upon darkness, the CAM plant had an initial peak in pCO2 (approx. 0.16 kPa) which then declined to a quasi-steady state for several hours and then pCO2 increased towards the end of the dark period. The C3 plant became severely hypoxic late in the dark period, whereas the CAM plant with greater cuticle permeability did not. Upon illumination, leaf pCO2 declined and pO2 increased, although aspects of these dynamics also differed between the two plants. The continuous measurements of pCO2 and pO2 highlighted the contrasting tissue gas compositions in submerged C3 and CAM plants. The CAM leaf pCO2 dynamics indicate an initial lag in CO2 sequestration to malate, which after several hours of malate synthesis then slows. Like the use of O2 microsensors to resolve questions related to plant aeration, deployment of the new CO2 microsensor will benefit plant ecophysiology research.

Highlights

  • CO2 exchange of plant tissues with the environment is routinely measured using an infrared gas analyser (IRGA) with a leaf chamber and, together with measured stomatal conductance, the intercellular CO2 concentration can be estimated (Long and Bernacchi, 2003)

  • A new amperometric CO2 microsensor and an O2 microsensor elucidated with high temporal resolution the dynamics in leaf pCO2 and pO2 during light–dark cycles for C3 Lobelia dortmanna and Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) Littorella uniflora aquatic plants

  • Key Results During the dark period, for the C3 plant, pCO2 increased to approx. 3.5 kPa, whereas for the CAM plant CO2 was mostly below 0.05 kPa owing to CO2 sequestration into malate

Read more

Summary

Introduction

CO2 exchange of plant tissues with the environment is routinely measured using an infrared gas analyser (IRGA) with a leaf chamber and, together with measured stomatal conductance, the intercellular CO2 concentration (ci) can be estimated (Long and Bernacchi, 2003). Leaf tissues of C3 and CAM plants are expected to display contrasting patterns of CO2 dynamics over a diurnal cycle and are well suited to demonstrate the CO2 microsensor, and using this new technique to obtain continuous data on CO2 acquisition by CAM vs C3 photosynthesis in aquatic plants. For C3 plants, leaf tissue ci has been estimated in many studies using an IRGA with an appropriate sample chamber. Studies on diurnal ci dynamics have been limited to discrete samplings of tissue gases from CAM plants

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call