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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
We studied morphological, biochemical
and physiological leaf acclimation to incident Photon-
Photosynthetic-Flux-Density (PPFD) in Quercus ilex
(holm oak) and Quercus suber (cork oak) at Mediterranean
evergreen oak woodlands of southern Portugal.
Specific leaf area (SLA) decreased exponentially with
increasing PPFD in both species. Q. ilex had lower
SLA values than Q. suber. Leaf nitrogen, cellulose and
lignin concentration (leaf area-based) scaled positively
with PPFD. Maximum rate of carboxylation
(Vcmax), capacity for maximum photosynthetic electron
transport (Jmax), rate of triose-P utilization (VTPU)
and the rate of nonphotorespiratory light respiration
(Rd) were also positively correlated with PPFD in both Quercus species, when expressed in leaf area but
not on leaf mass basis. Q suber showed to have higher
photosynthetic potential (Vcmax, Jmax
m and VTPU
m ) and a
higher nitrogen efficient nitrogen use than Q.ilex. Leaf
chlorophyll concentration increased with decreasing
PPFD, improving apparent quantum use efficiency
(U) in both Quercus species. We concluded that, in
Q.ilex and Q.suber, leaf structural plasticity is a
stronger determinant for leaf acclimation to PPFD
than biochemical and physiological plasticity.
Description
Keywords
Light Nitrogen Photosynthesis Quercus ilex Quercus suber SLA
Citation
Agroforest Systems, 82, 173-181