Effects of drought on light-energy dissipation mechanisms in high-light-acclimated, field-grown grapevines.

Funct Plant Biol

Laboratori de Fisiologia Vegetal, Departament de Biologia, Instituto Mediterráneo de Estudios Avanzados (CSIC-UIB), Universitat de les Illes Balears, Carretera de Valldemossa Km 7.5, 07071 Palma de Mallorca, Spain. Corresponding author; email:

Published: October 2002

The response of several light-energy dissipation mechanisms to water shortage was analysed in a 10-year study in field-grown, high-light-acclimated grapevines, and compared with those of greenhouse-grown, low-light-acclimated grapevines. Dissipation mechanisms, except leaf photochemistry, differ among cultivars and acclimate to the prevailing light conditions during growth. However, no additional acclimation to drought was observed. The dependence of the dissipation responses on stomatal conductance suggests that low CO2 availability in the chloroplasts during drought triggers variations in the energy dissipation pattern. In irrigated grapevines under high light, more than 50% of total absorbed energy is thermally dissipated. There is evidence that implicates the xanthophyll cycle as the main thermal dissipation processes. CO2 assimilation is the most important photochemical pathway of dissipation in irrigated plants, but is replaced by photorespiration when CO2 assimilation declines under mild drought. Under moderate to severe drought, both photosynthesis and photorespiration decline, and thermal dissipation increases to account for up to 90% of total dissipation. Involvement of other processes in light dissipation is minimal in grapevines. Even in severely-stressed leaves, the incidence of photoinhibition is very low, indicating that safe dissipation of absorbed energy is very effective in grapevines.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/FP02016DOI Listing

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