Environmental limitations to O3 uptake--some key results from young trees growing at elevated CO2 concentrations

Elevated carbon dioxide concentrations and limited water supply have been shown to reduce the impact of ozone pollution on the growth and physiology of Quercus petraea in a long-term factorial experiment. These responses can be explained by observed reductions in stomatal conductance, and thus poten...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water, air and soil pollution air and soil pollution, 1999-11, Vol.116 (1/2), p.299-310
Hauptverfasser: Broadmeadow, M.S.J, Heath, J, Randle, T.J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Elevated carbon dioxide concentrations and limited water supply have been shown to reduce the impact of ozone pollution on the growth and physiology of Quercus petraea in a long-term factorial experiment. These responses can be explained by observed reductions in stomatal conductance, and thus potential ozone exposure of 28% and 40% for CO^sub 2^ and drought treatments respectively. However, parameterisation of a stomatal conductance model for Quercus robur and Fagus sylvatica grown under ambient and elevated CO^sub 2^ concentrations in a separate experiment has demonstrated that elevated CO^sub 2^ also reduces the responsiveness of stomata to both saturation deficit (LAVPD) and soil moisture deficit (ψ) in beech, and to a lesser extent, in oak. Season-long model simulations of ozone fluxes suggest that LAVPD and ψ conductance parameters derived at ambient CO^sub 2^ concentrations will lead to these fluxes being underestimated by 24% and 2% for beech and oak respectively at 615 ppm CO^sub 2^.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
ISSN:0049-6979
1573-2932
DOI:10.1023/A:1005224823550