102 research outputs found

    Changes in photosynthetic capacity, carboxylation efficiency, and CO 2 compensation point associated with midday stomatal closure and midday depression of net CO 2 exchange of leaves of Quercus suber

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    The carbon-dioxide response of photosynthesis of leaves of Quercus suber , a sclerophyllous species of the European Mediterranean region, was studied as a function of time of day at the end of the summer dry season in the natural habitat. To examine the response experimentally, a “standard” time course for temperature and humidity, which resembled natural conditions, was imposed on the leaves, and the CO 2 pressure external to the leaves on subsequent days was varied. The particular temperature and humidity conditions chosen were those which elicited a strong stomatal closure at midday and the simultaneous depression of net CO 2 uptake. Midday depression of CO 2 uptake is the result of i) a decrease in CO 2 -saturated photosynthetic capacity after light saturation is reached in the early morning, ii) a decrease in the initial slope of the CO 2 response curve (carboxylation efficiency), and iii) a substantial increase in the CO 2 compensation point caused by an increase in leaf temperature and a decrease in humidity. As a consequence of the changes in photosynthesis, the internal leaf CO 2 pressure remained essentially constant despite stomatal closure. The effects on capacity, slope, and compensation point were reversed by lowering the temperature and increasing the humidity in the afternoon. Constant internal CO 2 may aid in minimizing photoinhibition during stomatal closure at midday. The results are discussed in terms of possible temperature, humidity, and hormonal effects on photosynthesis.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47468/1/425_2004_Article_BF00397440.pd

    Parametrisierung und Validation eines Lichtinterzeptionsmodells fĂĽr Strauchflechten

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    Sickendiek F, Ryel RJ, Beyschlag W. Parametrisierung und Validation eines Lichtinterzeptionsmodells für Strauchflechten. In: Beyschlag W, Steinlein T, eds. Bielefelder Ökologische Beiträge - Ökophysiologie pflanzlicher Interaktionen. 1999: 302-306

    Modeling Leaf/Canopy Photosynthesis

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    Measuring the primary production of whole canopies has become ab increasingly important aspect of ecological research. Questions pertaining to plant competition for light at the community level, to concern over changes in canopy flux rates resulting from global warming or increasing atmospheric CO2, can in part be addressed with measurements of whole canopy photosynthesis. Since photosynthesis measurements of individual foliage elements will generally not represent the behaviour of the whole plant (due to differences in age, physiology and exposure to microclimatic conditions), an important method for estimating these fluxes has involved the use of whole-canopy photosynthesis models. In this chapter, we will present a class of these models that scale up from single-leaf estimates to the whole canopy

    Variabilität stomatärer Aperturen bei Auftreten fleckenhafter Chlorophyllfluoreszenz

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    Kaiser H, Eckstein J, Kappen L, Beyschlag W. Variabilität stomatärer Aperturen bei Auftreten fleckenhafter Chlorophyllfluoreszenz. In: Beyschlag W, Steinlein T, eds. Bielefelder Ökologische Beiträge - Ökophysiologie pflanzlicher Interaktionen. Bielefeld; 1999: 246-252

    Bitte stören! Vegetationsdynamik in Sandlebensräumen.

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    Jentsch A, Nezadal W, Beyschlag W. Bitte stören! Vegetationsdynamik in Sandlebensräumen. In: Forschung und Naturschutz in Sandlebensräumen, Tagungsband. Erlangen: SandAchse Franken; 2001: 50-53

    Experimental and Modeling Studies of Competition for Light in Roadside Grasses

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