Ozone depletion and UVB radiation: Impact on plant DNA damage in southern South America
- 21 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (26) , 15310-15315
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.26.15310
Abstract
The primary motivation behind the considerable effort in studying stratospheric ozone depletion is the potential for biological consequences of increased solar UVB (280-315 nm) radiation. Yet, direct links between ozone depletion and biological impacts have been established only for organisms of Antarctic waters under the influence of the ozone "hole;" no direct evidence exists that ozone-related variations in UVB affect ecosystems of temperate latitudes. Indeed, calculations based on laboratory studies with plants suggest that the biological impact of ozone depletion (measured by the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in DNA) is likely to be less marked than previously thought, because UVA quanta (315-400 nm) may also cause significant damage, and UVA is unaffected by ozone depletion. Herein, we show that the temperate ecosystems of southern South America have been subjected to increasingly high levels of ozone depletion during the last decade. We found that in the spring of 1997, despite frequent cloud cover, the passages of the ozone hole over Tierra del Fuego (55 degrees S) caused concomitant increases in solar UV and that the enhanced ground-level UV led to significant increases in DNA damage in the native plant Gunnera magellanica. The fluctuations in solar UV explained a large proportion of the variation in DNA damage (up to 68%), particularly when the solar UV was weighted for biological effectiveness according to action spectra that assume a sharp decline in quantum efficiency with increasing wavelength from the UVB into the UVA regions of the spectrum.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Increased Summertime UV Radiation in New Zealand in Response to Ozone LossScience, 1999
- Solar ultraviolet‐B radiation influence on Sphagnum bog and Carex fen ecosystems: first field season findings in Tierra del Fuego, ArgentinaGlobal Change Biology, 1999
- The effects of solar ultraviolet‐B radiation on the growth and yield of barley are accompanied by increased DNA damage and antioxidant responsesPlant, Cell & Environment, 1999
- Solar ultraviolet-B radiation affects plant-insect interactions in a natural ecosystem of Tierra del Fuego (southern Argentina)Oecologia, 1998
- UV‐B component of sunlight causes measurable damage in field‐grown maize (Zea mays L.): developmental and cellular heterogeneity of damage and repairPlant, Cell & Environment, 1997
- Response of a natural Phaeocysris population to ambient fluctuations of UVB radiation caused by Antarctic ozone depletionJournal of Plankton Research, 1995
- Ecosystem Response to Solar Ultraviolet-B Radiation: Influence of Trophic-Level InteractionsScience, 1994
- Action spectrum for DMA damage in alfalfa lowers predicted impact of ozone depletionNature, 1992
- Ozone Depletion: Ultraviolet Radiation and Phytoplankton Biology in Antarctic WatersScience, 1992
- EFFECT OF ULTRAVIOLET IRRADIATION ON EGGS AND LARVAE OF THE NORTHERN ANCHOVY, ENGRAULIS MORDAX, AND THE PACIFIC MACKEREL, SCOMBER JAPONlCUS, DURING THE EMBRYONIC STAGE*Photochemistry and Photobiology, 1979