Abstract

Shoots of the tropical latex-producing tree Hevea brasiliensis (rubber tree) grow according to a periodic pattern, producing four to five whorls of leaves per year. All leaves in the same whorl were considered to be in the same leaf-age class, in order to assess the evolution of photosynthesis with leaf age in three clones of rubber trees, in a plantation in eastern Thailand. Light-saturated CO2 assimilation rate (A max) decreased more with leaf age than did photosynthetic capacity (maximal rate of carboxylation, V cmax , and maximum rate of electron transport, J max), which was estimated by fitting a biochemical photosynthesis model to the CO2-response curves. Nitrogen-use efficiency (A max/Na, Na is nitrogen content per leaf area) decreased also with leaf age, whereas J max and V cmax did not correlate with N a. Although measurements were performed during the rainy season, the leaf gas exchange parameter that showed the best correlation with A max was stomatal conductance (g s). An asymptotic function was fitted to the A max-g s relationship, with R 2 = 0.85. A max, V cmax, J max and g s varied more among different whorls in the same clone than among different clones in the same whorl. We concluded that leaf whorl was an appropriate parameter to characterize leaves for the purpose of modelling canopy photosynthesis in field-grown rubber trees, and that stomatal conductance was the most important variable explaining changes in A max with leaf age in rubber trees.

Highlights

  • Rubber is a major tree crop cultivated mainly under equatorial and monsoon climates (Indonesia, Malaysia, Southern Thailand)

  • Effect of leaf age on light-saturated CO2 assimilation rate in potted trees: Amax increased with leaf age (Fig. 2) and reached its maximum approximately 35 days after the B2 stage

  • Our results showed that in field-grown rubber trees, modelling stomatal conductance is of first importance in order to model canopy photosynthesis

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Summary

Introduction

Rubber is a major tree crop cultivated mainly under equatorial and monsoon climates (Indonesia, Malaysia, Southern Thailand). Among the relevant physiological traits, photosynthetic capacity of leaves is of first importance, as it determines carbon assimilation and primary productivity. The model of Farquhar et al (1980) is widely accepted. This model describes photosynthesis with two major parameters determining the biochemical capacities of the photosynthetic apparatus, Vcmax and Jmax. These parameters vary widely between species (Wullschleger 1993, Dreyer et al 2001, Medlyn et al 2002). Farquhar photosynthetic parameters have generally been assessed on young fully expanded leaves, ignoring leaf-age effect

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