
Photosynthesis of Grass Species Differing in Carbon Dioxide Fixation Pathways
Author(s) -
Jacqueline K. Bolton,
R. H. Brown
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.66.1.97
Subject(s) - photosynthesis , festuca arundinacea , panicum , carbon dioxide , biology , transpiration , botany , stomatal conductance , poaceae , horticulture , ecology
The response of apparent photosynthesis to N nutrition was studied in the C(3) grass, tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.), in the C(4) species Panicum maximum Jacq., and in Panicum milioides Nees ex Trin., a species with characteristics intermediate between C(3) and C(4) photosynthetic types. Plants were grown in culture solution containing 1, 5, 50, and 200 milligrams N per liter. Apparent photosynthesis was measured on the youngest fully expanded leaves at 320 microliters of CO(2) per liter of air and 21% O(2). Leaf conductance was calculated from transpiration measurements, and CO(2) compensation concentrations were also estimated. Several leaf anatomical characteristics were studied on plastic-embedded material. Leaf N content was determined on leaves which were used in photosynthesis measurements.Apparent photosynthesis increased in a linear fashion with increases in leaf N content in all three species. The increase in apparent photosynthesis per unit increase in leaf N was over twice as great in P. maximum (9.7 milligrams CO(2) per square decimeter per hour for each increase of 1% leaf N) as in P. milioides and tall fescue. Apparent photosynthesis and its response to N level were similar in P. milioides and tall fescue, but at leaf N concentrations above 2%, apparent photosynthesis in these two species was only about one-half of that in P. maximum. Increases in apparent photosynthesis due to higher N levels were accompanied by increases in both leaf and mesophyll conductances in P. maximum, whereas in P. milioides and tall fescue only mesophyll conductance was significantly correlated with leaf N. Water use efficiency (apparent photosynthesis/transpiration) increased in a linear manner with increased leaf N in all three species but was more closely related to leaf N in P. milioides and tall fescue than in P. maximum. High N levels tended to increase leaf thickness and interveinal distance in all three species. The percentage of air space in leaf tissue and the mesophyll cell diameter were either not affected or changed only slightly by N nutrition with the exception that percentage of air space in tall fescue leaves rose from 17.3 to 24.8 with an increase in solution N level from 1 to 200 milligrams per liter. Although P. milioides has been shown to have photosynthetic and leaf anatomical characteristics intermediate to C(3) and C(4) species, its response to N was similar to that of the C(3) grass, tall fescue.