Photosynthetic capacity of loblolly pine (Pinus taedaL.) trees during the first year of carbon dioxide enrichment in a forest ecosystem

Abstract
Our objective was to assess the photosynthetic responses of loblolly pine trees (Pinus taedaL.) during the first full growth season (1997) at the Brookhaven National Lab/Duke University Free Air CO2Enrichment (FACE) experiment. Gas exchange, fluorescence characteristics, and leaf biochemistry of ambient CO2(control) needles and ambient + 20 Pa CO2(elevated) needles were examined five times during the year. The enhancement of photosynthesis by elevated CO2in mature loblolly pine trees varied across the season and was influenced by abiotic and biotic factors. Photosynthetic enhancement by elevated CO2was strongly correlated with leaf temperature. The magnitude of photosynthetic enhancement was zero in March but was as great as 52% later in the season. In March, reduced sink demand and lower temperatures resulted in lower net photosynthesis, lower carboxylation rates and higher excess energy dissipation from the elevated CO2needles than from control needles. The greatest photosynthetic enhancement by CO2enrichment was observed in July during a period of high temperature and low precipitation, and in September during recovery from this period of low precipitation. In July, loblolly pine trees in the control rings exhibited lower net photosynthetic rates, lower maximum rates of photosynthesis at saturating CO2and light, lower values of carboxylation and electron transport rates (modelled fromA–Cicurves), lower total Rubisco activity, and lower photochemical quenching of fluorescence in comparison to other measurement periods. During this period of low precipitation trees in the elevated CO2rings exhibited reduced net photosynthesis and photochemical quenching of fluorescence, but there was little effect on light‐ and CO2‐saturated rates of photosynthesis, modelled rates of carboxylation or electron transport, or Rubisco activity. These first‐year data will be used to compare with similar measurements from subsequent years of the FACE experiment in order to determine whether photosynthetic acclimation to CO2occurs in these canopy loblolly pine trees growing in a forest ecosystem.

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