Seedlings of paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh.), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marsh.), and red pine (Pinus resinosa Ait.) fumigated with 0.2 ppm SO for 30 h at 30° C had higher leaf diffusive conductances (LDC) and absorbed more sulfur than seedlings fumigated at 12° C. Comparisons among the three species fumigated at the same temperature, however, do not support the view that a plant with higher LDC should absorb more SO than a plant with lower LDC. Mean relative growth rates ([Formula: see text]) of seedlings grown at 21° C after fumigation were variously affected by SO. [Formula: see text] of green ash was not inhibited by SO, but [Formula: see text] of roots of red pine seedlings was reduced by SO, with greater inhibition in seedlings fumigated at 30° C. Root and shoot [Formula: see text] of paper birch seedlings were lowered by SO, and effects of SO were about equal at both exposure temperatures. The data indicate that temperature can affect mechanisms of SO avoidance, tolerance, or both to various degrees in different species. Thus generalizations on the influence of exposure temperature on resistance of plants to SO may be inappropriate.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00344648DOI Listing

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