Abstract

Midday depression of photosynthesis has important consequences for ecosystem carbon exchange. Recent studies of forest trees have demonstrated that latent reduction of photosynthetic capacity can begin in the early morning, preceding the midday depression. We investigated whether such early morning reduction also occurs in an herbaceous species, Oenothera biennis. Diurnal changes of the photosynthetic light response curve (measured using a light-emitting diode) and incident sunlight intensity were measured under field conditions. The following results were obtained: (1) the light-saturated photosynthetic rate decreased beginning at sunrise; (2) the incident sunlight intensity on the leaves increased from sunrise; and (3) combining (1) and (2), the net photosynthetic rate under natural sunlight intensity increased from sunrise, reached a maximum at mid-morning, and then showed midday depression. Our results demonstrate that the latent morning reduction of photosynthetic capacity begins at sunrise, preceding the apparent midday depression, in agreement with previous studies of forest trees.

Highlights

  • Midday depression of photosynthesis has important consequences for ecosystem carbon exchange

  • We investigated whether such early morning reduction occurs in an herbaceous species, Oenothera biennis

  • Our results demonstrate that the latent morning reduction of photosynthetic capacity begins at sunrise, preceding the apparent midday depression, in agreement with previous studies of forest trees

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Summary

Introduction

Midday depression of photosynthesis has important consequences for ecosystem carbon exchange. Two studies of tropical rainforest tree species[21,22] and one study of a temperate tree species[23] investigated diurnal changes in photosynthetic capacity under saturating light intensity and the in situ photosynthetic rate under natural sunlight intensity conditions. These studies demonstrated that the reduction in photosynthetic capacity could begin as early as dawn, preceding the apparent midday depression. The midday depression reduced daily transpiration by 45% (40–52%) compared with the hypothetical

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