ABSTRACT Ephedra intermedia Schrenk et C.A.Meyer (Ephedraceae, Gnetales, Gymnospermae) contains ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, and has been used as Ephedra herb, a traditional medicine. Instead of degenerated leaves, photosynthetic assimilation is performed in their stems. Recently domestic cultivation of this species has been required, but relevant nutrient conditions for cultivation remain uncertain. In this study, we examined stem photosynthetic parameters in E. intermedia plants grown under different nutrient conditions in order to clarify relationships between the photosynthetic parameters and growth in their stems. Also, we examined whether the regulation of two photosystems of the photosynthetic electron transport system in E. intermedia stems is similar to that of angiosperm leaves. We cultivated E. intermedia plants under various nutrient conditions with different levels of nitrogen (N), and regularly measured CO2 assimilation rates, parameters of the photosynthetic electron transport system, and growth of E. intermedia stems. The stem growth was better under the condition with the additional ordinary chemical fertilizer compared to those with urea or magnesium lime. The seasonal changes were observed in the CO2 assimilation rates, Y(II), the quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII), and Y(ND), the non-photochemical yield due to donor side limitations in photosystem I (PSI). However, these parameters differed between nutrient conditions to small extents, and were not related to stem growth. Therefore, the measured parameters of photosynthesis could not explain the difference in stem growth between nutrient conditions. Although the photosynthetic parameters seasonally changed, the tight relationships between Y(ND), the PSI parameter, and Y(II) or Y(NPQ), the PSII parameters, were found throughout the seasons. These relationships between two photosystems in stems of gymnosperm E. intermedia were as the same as those in angiosperm leaves, although a flavodiiron protein can function as the electron sink in the stems of E. intermedia. This balance between two photosystems may be regulated by the system dependent on the thylakoid lumen pH, which may lead to the protection of two photosystems throughout the seasons.
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