Carbon Dioxide Compensation Points of Leaves and Stems and Their Relation to Net Photosynthesis
- 1 November 1971
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 48 (5) , 607-612
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.48.5.607
Abstract
The interactions between CO(2) and H(2)O vapor exchange of the leaf and respirant organs like stems were studied in tobacco plants. The results were analyzed according to a suggested model. Good agreement between open and closed system measurements supported the validity of the model.The measured over-all resistance to CO(2) of a leaf and a stem enclosed in a measuring cuvette was the same as the measured resistance of the leaf when measured alone provided the resistance of the stem to CO(2) is relatively high. The combined CO(2) compensation concentration of a leaf and stem having high resistance to CO(2) was higher than the CO(2) compensation point of the leaf alone, by the magnitude of rate of CO(2) evolution from the stem multiplied by the overall resistance of the leaf.CO(2) evolution into CO(2)-free air was found to be higher in light than in dark in leaves, while the reverse was true for stems. It was concluded that normally the CO(2) compensation point of a leaf is unaffected by stomata and boundary layer resistance while the combined CO(2) compensation point of a leaf and a stem differs in its nature since it represents a steady state of photosynthesis in which stem contribution, I(a), is equal to net photosynthesis, I(s). Interpretation of the experimental data shows tht respiration in the light is unaffected by external CO(2) concentration (at the range of 0-300 mul liter) and by intensity of photosynthesis.Keywords
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