Ecophysiology of C3 and C4 plants in terms of responses to extreme soil temperatures

被引:0
|
作者
Rogério de Souza Nóia Júnior
Genilda Canuto do Amaral
José Eduardo Macedo Pezzopane
João Vitor Toledo
Talita Miranda Teixeira Xavier
机构
[1] ESALQ,Department of Biosystems Engineering
[2] University of São Paulo,Department of Forestry Sciences
[3] NEDTEC,undefined
[4] Federal University of Espirito Santo,undefined
关键词
Gas exchange; Leaf temperature;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Extreme soil temperatures are the main limitation to the expansion of agriculture. In Brazil, this also affects the second crop, which is usually performed every year. We investigated the influence of soil temperature on the ecophysiology of two plant species with different mechanisms of CO2 assimilation: maize (C4) and bean (C3). The plants, in the vegetative phase, were subjected to three soil temperatures: low (9–12 °C), ambient (25–30 °C), and high (27–42 °C). Our results indicate that both low and high soil temperatures negatively affected the photosynthetic process of the studied plants. The reduction of CO2 assimilation rates under low soil temperature was mainly due to stomatal closure, while under high soil temperatures, it was related to decreased carboxylation rates. Short-term exposure to extreme soil temperatures affects the root system growth and, in maize plants, leads to impaired shoot dry mass accumulation. Besides that, stresses caused by high soil temperature reduced the relative water content of the leaves, causing an increase in leaf temperature and cells rupture.
引用
收藏
页码:261 / 274
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ecophysiology of C3 and C4 plants in terms of responses to extreme soil temperatures
    Noia Junior, Rogerio de Souza
    do Amaral, Genilda Canuto
    Macedo Pezzopane, Jose Eduardo
    Toledo, Joao Vitor
    Teixeira Xavier, Talita Miranda
    THEORETICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2018, 30 (03): : 261 - 274
  • [2] Different physiological responses of C3 and C4 plants to nanomaterials
    Tonghao Bai
    Peng Zhang
    Zhiling Guo
    Andrew J. Chetwynd
    Mei Zhang
    Muhammad Adeel
    Mingshu Li
    Kerui Guo
    Ruize Gao
    Jianwei Li
    Yi Hao
    Yukui Rui
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2021, 28 : 25542 - 25551
  • [3] Different physiological responses of C3 and C4 plants to nanomaterials
    Bai, Tonghao
    Zhang, Peng
    Guo, Zhiling
    Chetwynd, Andrew J.
    Zhang, Mei
    Adeel, Muhammad
    Li, Mingshu
    Guo, Kerui
    Gao, Ruize
    Li, Jianwei
    Hao, Yi
    Rui, Yukui
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2021, 28 (20) : 25542 - 25551
  • [4] THE REGULATION OF PHOSPHORIBULOKINASE IN C3 AND C4 PLANTS
    Ruffer-Turner, M. E.
    Bradbeer, J. W.
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1984, 75 : 52 - 52
  • [5] PEP CARBOXYLASES IN C3 AND C4 PLANTS
    TING, IP
    OSMOND, CB
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1972, 49 : 58 - &
  • [6] THE PRODUCTIVITY OF C3 AND C4 PLANTS - A REASSESSMENT
    SNAYDON, RW
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 1991, 5 (03) : 321 - 330
  • [7] Associated growth of C3 and C4 desert plants helps the C3 species at the cost of the C4 species
    Su, Peixi
    Yan, Qiaodi
    Xie, Tingting
    Zhou, Zijuan
    Gao, Song
    ACTA PHYSIOLOGIAE PLANTARUM, 2012, 34 (06) : 2057 - 2068
  • [8] Associated growth of C3 and C4 desert plants helps the C3 species at the cost of the C4 species
    Peixi Su
    Qiaodi Yan
    Tingting Xie
    Zijuan Zhou
    Song Gao
    Acta Physiologiae Plantarum, 2012, 34 : 2057 - 2068
  • [9] A study on the prospect of converting C3 plants into C4 plants
    Talukder, Pratik
    Sinha, Baishakhi
    Biswas, Sayantan
    Ghosh, Anushka
    Banerjee, Arpan
    Paul, Subhobrata
    BIOCATALYSIS AND AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2024, 58
  • [10] 28 ≤ R(C4, C4, C3, C3) ≤ 36
    Xu Xiaodong
    Radziszowski, Stanislaw P.
    UTILITAS MATHEMATICA, 2009, 79 : 253 - 257