Several plant species were examined at Churchill, Manitoba, in the transition zone between the low and subarctic regions. Leaves of arctic plants exhibit higher rates of total respiration and alternative (cyanide insensitive) respiration than temperate species. There is a negative correlation between plant height and alternative pathway activity. Shorter plants have higher rates of alternative pathway respiration. More alternative pathway activity may mean that there is less energy in the form of ATP available for growth. A shorter growth habit keeps these plants in the still air close to the ground. This prevents cooling, water loss and physical damage due to wind abrasion. Thus plants with high rates of alternative pathway respiration may be better adapted to the arctic environment. The alternative pathway respiration of Orchis rotundifolia was under the influence of the biological clock. -from Authors
CITATION STYLE
McNulty, A. K., Cummins, W. R., & Pellizzari, A. (1988). A field survey of respiration rates in leaves of arctic plants. Arctic, 41(1), 1–5. https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic1685
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