Effect of the Long-Term Elevation of CO(2) Concentration in the Field on the Quantum Yield of Photosynthesis of the C(3) Sedge, Scirpus olneyi

Plant Physiol. 1991 May;96(1):221-6. doi: 10.1104/pp.96.1.221.

Abstract

CO(2) concentration was elevated throughout 3 years around stands of the C(3) sedge Scirpus olneyi on a tidal marsh of the Chesapeake Bay. The hypothesis that tissues developed in an elevated CO(2) atmosphere will show an acclimatory decrease in photosynthetic capacity under light-limiting conditions was examined. The absorbed light quantum yield of CO(2) uptake (ø(abs) and the efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry were determined for plants which had developed in open top chambers with CO(2) concentrations in air of 680 micromoles per mole, and of 351 micromoles per mole as controls. An Ulbricht sphere cuvette incorporated into an open gas exchange system was used to determine ø(abs) and a portable chlorophyll fluorimeter was used to estimate the photochemical efficiency of photosystem II. When measured in an atmosphere with 10 millimoles per mole O(2) to suppress photorespiration, shoots showed a ø(abs) of 0.093 +/- 0.003, with no statistically significant difference between shoots grown in elevated or control CO(2) concentrations. Efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry was also unchanged by development in an elevated CO(2) atmosphere. Shoots grown and measured in 680 micromoles per mole of CO(2) in air showed a ø(abs) of 0.078 +/- 0.004 compared with 0.065 +/- 0.003 for leaves grown and measured in 351 micromoles per mole CO(2) in air; a highly significant increase. In accordance with the change in ø(abs), the light compensation point of photosynthesis decreased from 51 +/- 3 to 31 +/- 3 micro-moles per square meter per second for stems grown and measured in 351 and 680 micromoles per mole of CO(2) in air, respectively. The results suggest that even after 3 years of growth in elevated CO(2), there is no evidence of acclimation in capacity for photosynthesis under light-limited conditions which would counteract the stimulation of photosynthetic CO(2) uptake otherwise expected through decreased photorespiration.