AI Article Synopsis

  • Mesophyll conductance (g(m)) significantly affects photosynthesis by limiting CO(2) movement from substomatal cavities to chloroplasts, and recent studies suggest it can change quickly, although this is debated.
  • The study focused on g(m) variations in three Eucalyptus species, finding a 50% decrease in g(m) when CO(2) increased from 300 to 900 μmol mol(-1), and a 60% increase when light intensity rose from 200 to 1100 μmol mol(-1) PPFD.
  • The research concluded that changes in g(m) in response to CO(2) and light are valid, while respiration impacts absolute g(m) values but not the responses to CO(

Article Abstract

Mesophyll conductance (g(m)) is now recognized as an important limiting process for photosynthesis, as it results in a significant decrease of CO(2) diffusion from substomatal cavities where water evaporation occurs, to chloroplast stroma. Over the past decade, an increasing number of studies proposed that g(m) can vary in the short term (e.g. minutes), but these variations are still controversial, especially those potentially induced by changing CO(2) and irradiance. In this study, g(m) data estimated with online (13)C discrimination recorded with a tunable diode laser absorption spectrometer (TDL-AS) during leaf gas exchange measurements, and based on the single point method, are presented. The data were obtained with three Eucalyptus species. A 50% decrease in g(m) was observed when the CO(2) mole fraction was increased from 300 μmol mol(-1) to 900 μmol mol(-1), and a 60% increase when irradiance was increased from 200 μmol mol(-1) to 1100 μmol mol(-1) photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). The relative contribution of respiration and photorespiration to overall (13)C discrimination was also estimated. Not taking this contribution into account may lead to a 50% underestimation of g(m) but had little effect on the CO(2)- and irradiance-induced changes. In conclusion, (i) the observed responses of g(m) to CO(2) and irradiance were not artefactual; (ii) the respiratory term is important to assess absolute values of g(m) but has no impact on the responses to CO(2) and PPFD; and (iii) increasing irradiance and reducing the CO(2) mole fraction results in rapid increases in g(m) in Eucalyptus seedlings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3223034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/err141DOI Listing

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