Differences in transpiration rates between tropical and temperate grasses under controlled conditions
- 1 January 1969
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Planta
- Vol. 88 (3) , 261-273
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00385069
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to determine the transpiration rates of tropical and temperate grasses under a range of environmental conditions. In dense populations, three temperate grasses lost considerably more water per unit leaf area than did four tropical grasses, though tropical grasses tended to produce more dry matter per unit leaf area. The efficiency of production in relation to water use was thus greater in tropical than in temperate grasses. Wheat, a temperate grass, lost water at an average rate 2.25 times that of sorghum, a tropical grass, on a unit leaf area basis when single leaves were exposed to temperatures from 17 to 32° and light intensities from 1.7 to 4.4×104 ergs cm-2 sec-1 at 0.55 μ (1,100 to 2,800 ft.-c.). The measurement of transpiration and leaf temperature indicated that latent heat loss was much more important in wheat, and sensible heat loss was more important in sorghum as means of dissipating excess energy absorbed. These findings were attributed to the greater resistance to gas diffusion offered by sorghum than by wheat stomata in each environment.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of temperature on the gas exchange of leaves in the light and darkPlanta, 1969
- Carbon dioxide compensation—its relation to photosynthetic carboxylation reactions, systematics of the Gramineae, and leaf anatomyCanadian Journal of Botany, 1968
- Effects of Light and Temperature During Plant Growth on Subsequent Leaf Co2 Assimilation Rates Under Standard ConditionsAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1968
- Further studies on a new pathway of photosynthetic carbon dioxide fixation in sugar-cane and its occurrence in other plant speciesBiochemical Journal, 1967
- Enhanced photosynthesis at low oxygen concentrations: Differential response of temperate and tropical grassesPlanta, 1967
- Enhancement of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in the absence of oxygen, as dependent upon species and temperaturePlanta, 1967
- Photosynthesis among Species in Relation to Characteristics of Leaf Anatomy and CO2 Diffusion Resistance1Crop Science, 1965
- Leaf temperature and energy exchangeArchives for Meteorology Geophysics and Bioclimatology Series A, 1962
- An Airflow Planimeter for Measuring the Area of Detached LeavesPlant Physiology, 1959
- Researches on some of the physiological processes of green leaves, with special reference to the interchange of energy between the leaf and its surroundingsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1905