Carbon fixation in eucalypts in the field

Abstract
The rate of CO2 assimilation at light saturation and an intercellular CO2 concentration of 350 μl l-1 (photosynthetic capacity), measured in leaves of Eucalyptus pauciflora, E. behriana, E. delegatensis and Acacia melanoxylon, declined over the course of cloudless days under naturally varying environmental conditions as well as under constant optimal conditions for high CO2 uptake. Since the capacity did not recover during the light period, it was different from the “midday depression” of gas exchange. The change appeared to be caused neither by the diurnal variation of total leaf water potential, by photoinhibition of redox-reaction centres in photosystems nor by changes in the intrinsic properties of Ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase. The decline was more pronounced in winter than in summer. It was related to the duration of illumination or the cumulative carbon gain. It was reversible in the following dark phase, and it did not occur on changeable days with short peaks of high light. Despite the decline in photosynthetic capacity, the initial slope of the CO2 response of net photosynthesis, as obtained at low intercellular CO2 concentrations, remained constant during the day, but declined at night when photosynthetic capacity recovered. In all cases stomatal conductance varied in parallel with photosynthetic capacity. The relevance of changes in photosynthetic capacity for the intercellular CO2 concentration is discussed.