Is a short, sharp shock equivalent to long-term punishment? Contrasting the spatial pattern of acute and chronic ozone damage to soybean leaves via chlorophyll fluorescence imaging

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Abstract

Experimental investigations of ozone (O3) effects on plants have commonly used short, acute [O3] exposure (>100 ppb, on the order of hours), while in field crops damage is more likely caused by chronic exposure (<100 ppb, on the order of weeks). How different are the O3 effects induced by these two fumigation regimes? The leaf-level photosynthetic response of soybean to acute [O3] (400 ppb, 6 h) and chronic [O 3] (90 ppb, 8 h d-1, 28 d) was contrasted via simultaneous in vivo measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence imaging (CFI) and gas exchange. Both exposure regimes lowered leaf photosynthetic CO2 uptake about 40% and photosystem II (PSII) efficiency (Fq′/ Fm′) by 20% compared with controls, but this decrease was far more spatially heterogeneous in the acute treatment. Decline in F q′/Fm′ in the acute treatment resulted equally from decreases in the maximum efficiency of PSII (Fv′/F m′) and the proportion of open PSII centres (F q′/Fv′), but in the chronic treatment decline in Fq′/Fm′ resulted only from decrease in Fq′/Fv′. Findings suggest that acute and chronic [O3] exposures do not induce identical mechanisms of O 3 damage within the leaf, and using one fumigation method alone is not sufficient for understanding the full range of mechanisms of O3 damage to photosynthetic production in the field. © 2009 The Authors.

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Chen, C. P., Frank, T. D., & Long, S. P. (2009). Is a short, sharp shock equivalent to long-term punishment? Contrasting the spatial pattern of acute and chronic ozone damage to soybean leaves via chlorophyll fluorescence imaging. Plant, Cell and Environment, 32(4), 327–335. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3040.2008.01923.x

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