A fundamental component of most models of terrestrial carbon balance is an estimate of plant canopy photosynthetic uptake driven by radiation interception by the canopy. In this article, we review approaches used to model the conversion of radiation into photosynthate. As this process is well understood at the leaf-scale, the modelling problem is essentially one of up-scaling, to canopy, regional or global scale. Our review therefore focuses on issues of scaling, including model identification, parameterisation and validation at large scales. Four different approaches are commonly taken to modelling photosynthate production at large scales: the maximum productivity, resource-use efficiency, big-leaf, and sun-shade models. Models representing each of these approaches are discussed and model predictions compared with estimates of gross primary productivity derived from eddy covariance data measured above a Sitka spruce forest. The sun-shade model was found to perform best at all time scales considered. However, other models had significant advantages including simplicity of implementation and the ability to combine the model with remotely-sensed information on vegetation radiation interception. We conclude that all four approaches can be successfully used to model photosynthetic uptake and that the best approach in a given situation will depend on model objectives and data availability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/FP02088 | DOI Listing |
Physiol Plant
November 2024
Dipartimento di Biotecnologie, Università di Verona, Verona, Italy.
Increasing CO availability is a common practice at the industrial level to trigger biomass productivity in microalgae cultures. Still, the consequences of high CO availability in microalgal cells exposed to relatively high light require further investigation. Here, the photosynthetic, physiologic, and metabolic responses of the green microalga model Chlamydomonas reinhardtii were investigated in high or low CO availability conditions: high CO enabled higher biomass yields only if sufficient light energy was provided.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
December 2024
Key Laboratory of Oasis Eco-Agriculture, Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, Shihezi University, Shihezi, 832003, P.R. China.
Domestication has dramatically increased crop size and biomass, reflecting the enhanced accumulation of photosynthates. However, we still lack solid empirical data on the impacts of domestication on photosynthetic rates at different light intensities and on leaf anatomy, and of the relationships of photosynthesis with aboveground biomass. In this study, we measured the photosynthetic rate at three photosynthetic photon flux densities of 2000 (high), 1000 (moderate) and 400 μmol m sec (low light intensity), dark respiration, relative chlorophyll content (SPAD), leaf morphology, and aboveground biomass in 40 wild, 91 semiwild, and 42 domesticated cotton genotypes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYing Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao
April 2024
College of Agronomy, Shandong Agricultural University/National Key Laboratory of Wheat Breeding/Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Crop Ecophysiology and Farming System, Tai'an 271018, Shandong, China.
To provide a theoretical basis and technical support for the high-yield and high-efficiency production of wheat, we examined the effects of different tillage patterns on wheat grain yield of Jimai 22 and the physiological mechanisms in an experiment with three treatments: 14 years in rotary tillage (R), minimal and no tillage (S), and minimal and no tillage with a 2-year subsoiling interval (SS). We assessed the light interception by wheat plant canopy, the distribution of photosynthate transport, and grain yield for the three cultivation modes. The results showed that leaf area index was significantly higher for SS treatment than the other treatments at 14-28 days after anthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunct Plant Biol
April 2024
State Key Laboratory of Aridland Crop Science, Gansu Agricultural University, Lanzhou 730070, People's Republic of China; and College of Agronomy, Gansu Agricultural University, Lanzhou 730070, People's Republic of China.
To improve light harvest and plant structural support under low light intensity, it is useful to investigate the effects of different ratios of blue light on petiole and stem growth. Two true leaves of soybean seedlings were exposed to a total light intensity of 200μmolm-2 s-1 , presented as either white light or three levels of blue light (40μmolm-2 s-1 , 67μmolm-2 s-1 and 100μmolm-2 s-1 ) for 15days. Soybean petioles under the low blue light treatment upregulated expression of genes relating to lignin metabolism, enhancing lignin content compared with the white light treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Environ
June 2024
Institut de recherche en horticulture et semences, INRAe, Université d'Angers, Beaucouzé, France.
Day respiration (R) is the metabolic, nonphotorespiratory process by which illuminated leaves liberate CO during photosynthesis. R is used routinely in photosynthetic models and is thus critical for calculations. However, metabolic details associated with R are poorly known, and this can be problematic to predict how R changes with environmental conditions and relates to night respiration.
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