Abstract

SUMMARYMeasurements of carbon dioxide exchange and transpiration were made, at various air temperatures, on wheat and barley using a field enclosure system. From these were derived the stomatal and mesophyll resistances to carbon dioxide transfer. Optimum temperatures for net CO2 uptake were about 24°C for wheat and barley. Above these optima, as temperature increased so net CO2 uptake rates decreased, because of increasing stomatal and mesophyll resistances; transpiration rates decreased in wheat but were constant in barley.In laboratory growth cabinets, wheat plants were subjected to different regimes of temperature and humidity. Optimum temperature for net CO2 uptake of individual leaves was 25°C. At constant humidity, a decline in net uptake rates above 25°C was associated with large increases in mesophyll resistance. At a constant 25°C, as the vapour pressure deficit (v.p.d. was increased above 1 k Pa (10 mb) v.p.d. the net uptake declined, with an increase in mesophyll resistance and a small increase in stomatal resistance. When the v.p.d. exceeded 1 k Pa at a temperature of 30°C, conditions that are experienced by field plants, then there were large increases in both mesophyll and stomatal resistances and the net uptake rates declined. Photo‐respiration, as measured by CO2 uptake in oxygen‐free air, was independent of temperature, but both dark respiration and CO2 compensation concentration increased with temperature.

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