학술논문

Effects of CO2 and temperature on growth and resource use of co-occurring C3and C4 annuals
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Ecology. August 1992, Vol. 73 Issue 4, p1244, 16 p. graph
Subject
Plants, Effect of carbon dioxide on -- Research
Plants, Effect of temperature on -- Research
Amaranthus -- Research
Shrubs -- Research
Plant physiology -- Research
Language
ISSN
0012-9658
Abstract
We examined how [CO.sub.2] concentrations and temperature interacted to affect growth, resource acquisition, and resource allocation of two annual plants that were supplied with a single pulse of nutrients. Physiological and growth measurements were made on individuals of Abutilon theophrasti ([C.sub.3]) and Amaranthus retroflexus ([C.sub.4]) grown in environments with atmospheric [CO.sub.2] levels of 400 or 700 [mu]L/L and with light/dark temperatures of 28 [degrees]/22[degrees] or 38 [degrees]/31 [degrees] C. Elevated [CO.sub.2] and temperature treatments had significant independent and interactive effects on plant growth, resource allocation, and resource acquisition (i.e., photosynthesis and nitrogen uptake), and the strength and direction of these effects were often dependent on plant species. For example, final biomass of Amaranthus was enhanced by elevated [CO.sub.2] at 28 [degrees] but was depressed at 38 [degrees]. For Abutilon, elevated [CO.sub.2] increased initial plant relative growth rates at 28 [degrees] but not at 38 degrees], and had no significant effects on final biomass at either temperature. These results are interpreted in light of the interactive effects of [CO.sub.2] and temperature on the rates of net leaf area production and loss, and on net whole-plant nitrogen retention. At 28 [degrees] C, elevated [CO.sub.2] stimulated the initial production of leaf area in both species, which led to an initial stimulation of biomass accumulation at the higher [CO.sub.2] level. However, in elevated [CO.sub.] at 28 degrees], the rate of net leaf area loss for Abutilon increased while that of Amaranthus decreased. Furthermore, high [CO.sub.2] apparently enhanced the ability of Amaranthus to retain nitrogen at this temperature, which may have helped to enhance photosynthesis, whereas nitrogen retention was unaffected in Abutilon. Thus, at 28 [degrees], final biomass of Abutilon was not stimulated in a high [CO.sub.2] environment whereas the final biomass of Amaranthus was. At 38 [degrees], Abutilon had slightly reduced peak leaf areas under elevated [C).sub.2] in comparison to ambient [CO.sub.2] grown plants, but increased rates of photosynthesis per unit leaf area early in the experiment apparently compensated for reduced leaf area. For Amaranthus at 38 degrees], peak leaf area production was not affected by [CO.sub.2] treatment, but the rate of net leaf area loss hastened under elevated [CO.sub.2] conditions and was accompanied by substantial reductions of whole-plant nitrogen content and leaf photosynthesis. This may have led to the reduced biomass accumulation of high [CO.sub.2] grown plants that we observed during the last 30 d of growth. Plants of both species grown in elevated [CO.sub.2] exhibited reduced tissue-specific rates of nitrogen absorption, increased plant photosynthetic rate per unit of conductance, and increased initial allocation of biomass to roots, irrespective of temperature. Plants of both species grown under an elevated temperature regime had substantially decreased reproductive allocation, increased allocation to stem biomass, and increased plant water flux at both [CO.sub.2] treatments. The age of plants also affected our interpretations of plant responses tO [CO.sub.2] and temperature treatments. For example, significant effects of [CO.sub.2] treatment on the growth of Abutilon were evident early, prior to the initiation of flowering, when nitrogen availability would have been highest and pot space would not have been limited. Nevertheless, the opposite was true for Amaranthus, in which significant effects of [CO.sub.2] treatment on plant growth were not detectable until the final 30 d of the experiment. Elevated [CO.sub.2] interacted with temperature to affect plant productivity in different ways than would have been predicted from plant responses to elevated [CO.sub.2] alone. Furthermore, a majority of the interactive effects of [CO.sub.2] concentration and temperature on plant growth could be interpreted in light of their effects on the rates of net leaf area production and loss, nitrogen retention, and, to a lesser degree, photosynthesis and resource partitioning.