Abstract
A growth chamber experiment was conducted to examine the effects of UV-B exposure (4.9 kJ m-2 day-1 of biologically effective UV-B, 280-320 nm) on shoot growth and secondary metabolite production in Betula pendula (Roth) and B. resinifera (Britt.) seedlings originating from environments in Finland, Germany and Alaska differing in solar UV-B radiation and climate. Neither shoot growth nor the composition of secondary metabolites was affected by UV-B irradiance, but the treatment induced significant changes in the amounts of individual secondary metabolites in leaves. Leaves of seedlings exposed to UV-B radiation contained higher concentrations of several flavonoids, condensed tannins and some hydroxycinnamic acids than leaves of control seedlings that received no UV-B radiation. At the population level, there was considerable variation in secondary metabolite responses to UV-B radiation: among populations, the induced response was most prominent in Alaskan populations, which were adapted to the lowest ambient UV-B radiation environment. I conclude that solar UV-B radiation plays an important role in the formation of secondary chemical characteristics in birch trees.
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Lavola, A. (1998). Accumulation of flavonoids and related compounds in birch induced by UV-B irradiance. Tree Physiology, 18(1), 53–58. https://doi.org/10.1093/treephys/18.1.53
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