Abstract

When chlorophyll fluorescence is measured on leaves with restricted gas exchange by a transparent film or Vaseline seal, the obtained electron transport rate in photosystem II (JPSIIseal) was reported show a positive linear correlation with the maximum photosynthetic activity. This is because in a sealed leaf, the CO2 substrate for ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate-carboxylase/oxygenase is derived primarily from photorespiration. Our objective was to clarify whether the JPSIIseal also corresponds to photosynthetic activity in tomato leaflets. The JPSIIseal of a leaflet had a positive linear relationship with the gross photosynthetic rate at 30 mmol mol−1 oxygen. This suggests that the JPSIIseal represents the photosynthetic carbon fixation activity. Maintaining a tight seal with the transparent film was difficult because of the gap between the film and leaflet during transpiration. In contrast, the tight seal with Vaseline enabled measurements for at least 30 min. Additionally, the measurements could be completed faster for the Vaseline-sealed leaflets. The variation in the JPSIIseal of tomato leaflets increased with increasing leaf age. The leaf JPSIIseal (i.e., calculated based on 10–13 leaflets) decreased with increasing leaf age. We propose that chlorophyll fluorescence measurements for Vaseline-sealed leaflets may be useful for comprehensive analyses of tomato leaf photosynthetic characteristics.

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