Abstract
Elevated [CO2] has been shown to protect photosynthesis and growth of wheat against moderately elevated [O3]. To investigate the role of ozone exclusion and detoxification in this protection, spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Wembley) was grown from seed, in controlled-environment chambers, under reciprocal combinations of [CO2] at 350 or 700 μmol mol-1 and [O3] peaking at < 5 or 60 nmol mol-1, respectively. Cumulative ozone dose to the mesophyll and antioxidant status were determined throughout flag leaf development. Catalase activity correlated with rates of photorespiration and declined in response to elevated [CO2] and/or [O3]. Superoxide dismutase activity was not significantly affected by either condition. Neither ascorbate nor glutathione content was enhanced by elevated [CO2]. In wheat, at moderately elevated [O3], our results show that stomatal exclusion plays a major role in the protective effect of elevated [CO2] against O3 damage.
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Mckee, I. F., Eiblmeier, M., & Polle, A. (1997). Enhanced ozone-tolerance in wheat grown at an elevated CO2 concentration: Ozone exclusion and detoxification. New Phytologist, 137(2), 275–284. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1469-8137.1997.00801.x
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