Anatomical and morphological alterations in longleaf pine needles resulting from growth in elevated CO2: interactions with soil resource availability
Studies of anatomical changes in longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) needles for plants exposed to elevated atmospheric CO2 may provide insight into the potential influences of global CO2 increases on plant productivity. Longleaf pine seedlings were grown in open-top field chambers supplied with e...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of plant sciences 1998-11, Vol.159 (6), p.1002-1009 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Studies of anatomical changes in longleaf pine (Pinus
palustris Mill.) needles for plants exposed to elevated atmospheric
CO2 may provide insight into the potential influences of
global CO2 increases on plant productivity. Longleaf pine
seedlings were grown in open-top field chambers supplied with either
ambient (∼365 μmol mol−1) or elevated (∼720
μmol mol−1) atmospheric CO2 for 20 mo.
Two levels of soil nitrogen (40 and 400 g ha−1
yr−1) and two soil moisture regimes (−0.5 or
−1.5 MPa predawn xylem pressure potential) were used in
combination with CO2 treatments. Needle tissue was collected
12 and 20 mo after treatment initiation and subjected to light and scanning
electron microscopy. There was no effect of elevated CO2 on
stomatal distribution or the proportion of internal leaf area allocated to
a given tissue type at either sampling date. Although the relationships
between vascular, transfusion, mesophyll, and epidermal tissue
cross-sectional areas to total leaf cross-sectional areas
appear nonplastic, leaves grown in elevated CO2 with low N
availability exhibit anatomical characteristics suggestive of reduced
capacity to assimilate carbon, including decreased mesophyll cell surface
area per unit needle volume (in low-N soil). Significantly greater
(8%) needle fascicle volume as a result of growth in elevated
CO2 was observed after 12 mo because of thicker needles. After
20 mo of exposure, there was a trend indicating smaller fascicle volume
(8%) in plants grown with elevated CO2 compared with those
grown in ambient conditions, resulting from shorter needles and smaller
mesophyll, vascular tissue, and epidermal cell cross-sectional
areas. These results indicate short-term stimulation and
long-term inhibition of needle growth in longleaf pine as a result
of exposure to elevated CO2 and suggest at the leaf level that
pine species are less responsive to elevated CO2 than are
dicotyledons, including other tree species. |
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ISSN: | 1058-5893 1537-5315 |
DOI: | 10.1086/314092 |