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Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Altitudinal Variation in the Photosynthetic Characteristics of Snow Gum, Eucalyptus pauciflora Sieb. ex Spreng. VI. Comparison of Field and Phytotron Responses to Growth Temperature

RO Slayter

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 4(6) 901 - 916
Published: 1977

Abstract

A procedure for estimating field photosynthetic temperature optima from phytotron temperature response data, for elevational populations of E. pauciflora, is developed. It utilizes the principle that each population has a preferred temperature, Tpref, and an acclimation coefficient, α, which can be determined from phytotron-derived temperature response curves, and which enable the photosynthetic temperature optimum observed in a particular field temperature regime (Test) to be estimated from the expression

Test = Tpref - α(Tpref - Tequiv),

where Tequiv is a field temperature equivalent, in terms of its effect on the photosynthetic temperature optimum, to a known phytotron growth temperature.

Application of the procedure to sets of field and greenhouse data suggests that when Tpref and α are based on phytotron day growth temperatures, and when Tequiv is based on the proposition that a square-wave conversion of the field day-time temperature curve is equivalent to the phytotron day growth temperature, estimates of field and greenhouse temperature optima can be made which give good agreement with observed values. The agreement is best when active, current-year tissue is used as a basis of the field observations and when single leaves rather than shoots are used for field measurements.

The procedure is also used to compare actual rates of net photosynthesis, Pamb, obtained from field and phytotron studies, when both are plotted against equivalent temperature. Using this procedure, the large apparent differences between rates of net photosynthesis observed in the field and in the phytotron can be considerably reduced. This suggests that the notion of equivalent temperature may provide a useful means of minimizing the effects of physical, temperature-related differences in comparing field and phytotron responses, thereby widening the range of practical applications of phytotron experiments.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9770901

© CSIRO 1977

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