Abstract

The aim of the presented work was to study whether the efficiency of photosynthesis may influence resistance of hardened plants to disease. Seedlings of spring barley, meadow fescue and winter oilseed rape were chilled at 5 °C for 2, 4 or 6 weeks and at these deadlines the changes in cell membrane permeability (expressed as electrolyte leakage), chlorophyll fluorescence (initial fluorescence - F0, maximal fluorescence - Fm, quantum yield of PSII - Fv/Fm) and net photosynthesis rate (FN) were measured. Also, the influence of cold on the degree of plant resistance to economically important pathogens -Bipolaris sorokiniana or Phoma lingam was estimated. Two, four or six week-hardened plants were artificially infected: barley and fescue by B. sorokiniana, and oilseed rape by P. lingam.

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