AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how phenolic compounds accumulate in the twigs of male and female Populus tremula trees, focusing on developmentally regulated changes and environmental conditions like elevated temperature and UVB radiation.
  • Treatments over three growing seasons showed that while condensed tannins increased with age in temperature-affected plants, there was no age-dependent variation in the overall accumulation of low molecular weight phenolics or in growth rates.
  • The findings indicate that phenolic accumulation may not always change with age in perennial plants, and that elevated temperature effects on growth and phenolic concentrations may lessen as the trees mature.

Article Abstract

Accumulation of secondary metabolites may exhibit developmentally regulated variation in different plant organs. Moreover, prevailing environmental conditions may interact with development-related variations in plant traits. In this study, we examined developmentally regulated variation in phenolic accumulation in the twigs of dioecious Populus tremula (L.) and how the effects of elevated temperature and ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation on growth and phenolics accumulation varied as the plants get older. In an open-field experiment, six female and six male genotypes were exposed to single and combined elevated temperature and UVB radiation treatments for three consecutive growing seasons. The concentrations of low molecular weight phenolics and condensed tannins did not show age-dependent variation in the twigs. In temperature-treated plants, diameter growth rate decreased, and concentration of condensed tannins increased as plants aged; there were no cumulative effects of elevated UVB radiation on growth and phenolic accumulation. Females maintained a higher concentration of low molecular weight phenolics throughout the experimental period; however, growth and phenolic concentration did not vary over time in females and males. Our results suggest that phenolic accumulation in perennial plants may not necessarily always exhibit age-dependent variation and the effects of elevated temperature on growth and phenolic may diminish as plants get older.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plaphy.2021.05.012DOI Listing

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