Characterization of stomatal closure caused by ultraviolet-B radiation

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Abstract

The effects of ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation on stomatal conductance (g(s)) in pea (Pisum sativum L.), commelina (Commelina communis L.), and oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) plants were investigated. Plants were grown in a greenhouse either with three different high ratios of UV-B to photosynthetically active radiation or with no UV-B radiation. Pea plants grown in the highest UV-B radiation (0.63 W m-2) exhibited a substantial decrease of adaxial and abaxial g(s) (approximately 80% and 40%, respectively). With growth in 0.30 W m-2 of UV-B adaxial g(s) was decreased by 23%, with no effect on abaxial g(s), and lower UV-B irradiance of 0.21 W m-2 had no effect on either surface. Although abaxial g(s) increased when leaves were turned over in control plants, it did not in plants grown with the highest UV-B. Adaxial g(s) in commelina and oilseed rape also decreased on exposure to high UV-B (0.63 W m-2). For previously unexposed pea plants the time course of the effect of UV-B on g(s) was slow, with a lag of approximately 4 h, and a time constant of approximately 3 h. We conclude that there is a direct effect of UV-B on stomata in addition to that caused by changes in mesophyll photosynthesis.

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Nogués, S., Allen, D. J., Morison, J. I. L., & Baker, N. R. (1999). Characterization of stomatal closure caused by ultraviolet-B radiation. Plant Physiology, 121(2), 489–496. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.121.2.489

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