Abstract

ABSTRACTGas exchange data and images of leaf fluorescence were collected concurrently as stomata responded to abscisic acid (ABA) application. When 10−5kmolm−3 ABA was applied to the transpiration stream in a short pulse, stomatal conductance (gs), photosynthesis (A) and intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) decreased rapidly after a short lag period and became approximately constant after 2h. There was an apparent reduction in the A versus c1 relationship as stomata closed, but the data returned to the A versus C1 curve while stomatal conductance was constant or slowly rising during the second hour after ABA treatment. Larger amounts of ABA administered during the pulse caused larger deviations from the A versus c1 relationship. When 10−7kmolm−3 ABA was applied continuously through the transpiration stream, gs, A and Ci decreased, but there was no substantial deviation from the A versus c{ curve. Fluorescence images were patchy as stomata closed for all experiments, but became slowly more uniform during the time that gas exchange was returning to the A versus Cj curve. The distribution of con‐ductance among patches was not bimodal, and larger devi‐ations from the A versus ct curve had greater ranges of pixel values and more pixel values representing low values of Cj during stomatal closure than did experiments show‐ing small or no deviation. Estimates of A and gs from fluo‐rescence images compared favourably with measured val‐ues in most cases, suggesting that the patchy distributions of fluorescence were caused by patchy distributions of stomatal conductance and that apparent reductions in the A versus ct relationship were the result of these patchy stomatai distributions and not direct effects of ABA on mesophyll functioning. The data show that stomatal patches can be temporary and that patchiness may not be reflected in gas exchange data if the range of stomatal con‐ductances is not large. These observations may explain some of the discrepancies among previous studies concerning the effect of ABA on the A versus Ci relationship.

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