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CRITICAL LEVELS OF LIGHT AND TEMPERATURE REGULATING THE GAMETOGENESIS OF THREE LAMINARIA SPECIES (PHAEOPHYCEAE) 1
Author(s) -
Lüning Klaus
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1111/j.1529-8817.1980.tb02992.x
Subject(s) - gametophyte , laminaria , saccharina , sporophyte , biology , botany , laminaria digitata , algae , sunlight , physics , optics , pollen
Gametophytes of three Laminaria species occurring near Helgoland, North Sea, were cultivated 4 wk in a 12:12 LD regime at different temperatures in artificial light fields, and in the sea at different water depths. In the artificial light fields underwater spectral distribution was simulated according to Jerlov water Types 5, 7, 9. Blue light in the simulated light fields amounted to 17, 12 or 4% of total quanta. The rate of vegetative growth did not depend on spectral distribution, was light‐saturated at 4–6 W · m −2 , and increased with temperature up to 15 C. L. saccharina (L.) Lamour. exhibited the highest tolerance towards temperature, light and UV. Gametophytes survived 1 wk at 21 C ± 0.1, but not 22 C ± 0.1. Gametophytes of L. hyperborea (Gunn.) Fosl. and L. digitata (Huds.) Lamour. survived 1 wk at 20 C ± 0.1, but not at 21 C ± 0.1. In sunlight, and in the light field of a xenon lamp, 50% of L. saccharina gametophytes were killed by a quantum dose of 50 μEin · cm −2 , and 100% of the plants by 90 μEin · cm −2 . Approximately half of these quantum doses killed the corresponding percent of the other species gametophytes. Appreciably higher quantum doses were survived in visible light, with red being the most detrimental. Fertility depended on a critical quantum dose of blue light which decreased almost exponentially with decreasing temperature. The quantum dose (400–512 nm) required for induction of fertilization of 50% of the female gametophytes (males react similarly) was 90 μEin · cm −2 at 5 C, 110 μEin · cm −2 at 10 C, 230 (560 in L. digitata) μEin · cm −2 at 15 C, and 560 ( L. hyperborea) or about 850 (other 2 species) μEin · cm −2 at 18 C. In the sea the gametophytes survived the dark winter months in the unicellular stage, with almost no vegetative growth of the primary cell, due to lack of light. In early spring the female gametophytes matured in the unicellular, and the males in a few‐celled stage at the depth of 2 m, as did the laboratory cultures under conditions inducing maximal fertility.