Abstract

The light environments and rates of photosynthesis by leaves of Argyrodendron peralatum (F. M. Bailey) I.H. Boas were examined at eight positions within a natural rainforest canopy. Daily integrals of irradiance at leaf surfaces expressed as a percentage of that reaching a horizontal sensor in the open decreased from about 50% in the uppermost leaves to about 20% at a point 2 m below the top of the crown and to 10-15% in the lower crown and understory. Leaves in the upper crown had maximum instantaneous rates of apparent photosynthesis of 11.5 �mol CO2 m-2 s-1, whilst leaves in the lower crown of the same tree, and in understory saplings had maximum photosynthesis rates of 8.2 �mol m-2 s-1. These rates were not significantly different, and are within the range observed in a number of rainforest species characteristic of later successional stages. Under conditions of adequate water supply, photosynthetic rate was light-saturated by 500 �mol quanta m-2 s-1, irrespective of level in the canopy.

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