Data from: Continuous high and low temperature induced a decrease of photosynthetic activity and changes in the diurnal fluctuations of organic acids in Opuntia streptacantha
Opuntia plants grow naturally in areas where temperatures are extreme and highly variable in the day during the entire year. These plants survive through different adaptations to respond to adverse environmental conditions. Despite this capability, it is unknown how CAM photosynthetic activity and g...
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Zusammenfassung: | Opuntia plants grow naturally in areas where temperatures are extreme and
highly variable in the day during the entire year. These plants survive
through different adaptations to respond to adverse environmental
conditions. Despite this capability, it is unknown how CAM photosynthetic
activity and growth in Opuntia plantlets is affected by constant heat or
cold. Therefore, the main objective of this research was to evaluate the
short-term effect of high (40°C) and low (4°C) continuous temperatures on
the photosynthetic efficiency, the organic acid content (malic acid) and
the relative growth rate (RGR) in seven-month-old Opuntia streptacantha
plantlets during 5, 10, and 15 days. Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis
allowed us to determine that high temperatures negatively impact the
photosynthetic efficiency of O. streptacantha plantlets, which exhibited
the lowest values of maximum quantum efficiency of the photosystem II
(Fv/Fm = 52%, Fv/F0 = 85%), operational quantum yield of PS (ΦPSII = 65%)
and relative electron transport rate (rETR = 65%), as well as highest
values of basal fluorescence (F0 = 226%) during 15 days of treatment.
Similarly, low temperatures decreased Fv/Fm (16%), Fv/F0 (50%), ΦPSII and
rETR (16%). High temperatures also decreased nocturnal acidification in
approximately 34–50%, whereas low temperatures increased it by 30–36%.
Additionally, both continuous temperatures affected drastically diurnal
consumption of malic acid, which was related to a significant RGR
inhibition, where the specific photosynthetic structure area component was
the most affected. Our results allowed determining that, despite the high
tolerance to extreme temperatures described for Opuntia plants, young
individuals of O. streptacantha suffered photosynthetic impairment that
led to the inhibition of their growth. Thus, the main findings reported in
this study can help to predict the potential impact of climatic change on
the establishment and survival of succulent species of arid and semiarid
regions of Mexico. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.gb645 |