Ten species of brown macroalgae (five eulittoral and one submersed species of the Fucales; four submersed species of the Laminariales) from a rocky shore at Arbroath, Scotland, were examined for characteristics of emersed photosynthesis in relation to the partial pressure of CO and O. The five eulittoral species of the Fucaceae were approaching CO saturation for light-saturated photosynthesis at normal air levels of CO (35 Pa) in 21 kPa O. The normally submersed algae are further from CO saturation under these conditions, especially in the case of the four members of the Laminariales. The rate of net photosynthesis in the Fucaceae is O-independent in the range 2-21 kPa O over the entire range of CO partial pressure tested (compensation up to 95 Pa). For the other five algae tested, net photosynthesis is slightly inhibited by O at 21 kPa relative to 2 kPa over the entire range of CO partial pressures tested (compensation up to 95 Pa). CO compensation partial pressures are low (<0.5 Pa) for the Fucaceae and independent of O in the range 2-42 kPa. For the other five algae, the CO compensation partial pressure are higher, and increased with O partial pressure in the range 2-42 kPa. These gas exchange data show that the Fucaceae exhibit more C-like characteristics of their photosynthetic physiology than do the other five species tested, although even the Laminariales and Halidrys siliquosa are not classic C plants in their photosynthetic physiology. These data suggest that, in emersed conditions as well as in the previously reported work on submersed photosynthesis, a "CO concentrating mechanism" is operating which, by energized transmembrane transport of inorganic C, accumulates CO at the site of RUBISCO and, at least in part, suppresses the oxygenase activity. Work with added extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA), and with a relatively membrane-impermeant inhibitor of the native extracellular CA activity (acetazolamide), suggests that, in emersed conditions as well as in the previously reported work on algae submersed in seawater at pH 8, HCO is the major inorganic C species entering the cell. At optimal hydration, the rate of emersed photosynthesis in air is not less than the rate of photosynthesis when submersed in seawater, at least for the Fucaceae. δC ratios of organic C for the Fucaceae are slightly more negative than is the case for the other five algae; these data are consitent with substantial (half or more of the entering inorganic C) leakage of CO from the accumulated pool, and with some contribution of atmospheric CO to the organic C gain by the eulittoral algae. The predicted increase in N use efficiency of photosynthesis in the Fucaceae, with their more strongly developed CO concentrating mechanism, is consistent with data on emersed, but not submersed, photosynthesis for the algae collected from the wild and thus at a poorly defined N status. The more C-like gas exchange charateristics of photosynthesis in the eulittoral Fucaceae may be important in increasing the water use efficiency of emersed photosynthesis from the limited capital of water available for transpiration by a haptophyte.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00318535 | DOI Listing |
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