1 / 48

Introduction to Plant Gas Exchange Measurements

Introduction to Plant Gas Exchange Measurements. LI-COR Inc., Lincoln, NE, USA. Who Measures Photosynthesis?. Mainly scientists measure photosynthesis Crop producers (farmers, horticulturalists) do not usually measure photosynthesis

crescent
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Plant Gas Exchange Measurements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Plant Gas Exchange Measurements LI-COR Inc., Lincoln, NE, USA

  2. Who Measures Photosynthesis? • Mainly scientists measure photosynthesis • Crop producers (farmers, horticulturalists) do not usually measure photosynthesis • In the paste, improvements in crop production were achieved by lengthening the growing period, by selecting higher grain:foliage ratio, by the application of fertilizer and irrigation - without understanding photosynthesis.

  3. Gas exchange versus agronomic measurements • Gas exchange – short term, high sensitivity – e.g. reducing PAR reduces A • Agronomic – longer term, integrative (final yield, biomass production, LAI, etc.) Analogous to monitoring heart, blood pressure, sugar etc. versus monitoring weight, height of a child

  4. Practical applications of gas exchange measurements examples (I): • Cold tolerance of Maize genotypes • Screening for fungicides, insecticides, with least harmful effect on crop • Screening for selective herbicides

  5. Practical applications of gas exchange measurements examples (II): • Correct drought stress for growing sweet grapes by monitoring stomatal conductance • Finding optimum light levels for growing medicinal herbs – absence of active compounds under high light conditions • Screening for reduced photorespiration

  6. Basic Research Should we never study anything unless it has an immediate practical application?

  7. Historical examples of basic research • History of electricity - Michael Faraday’s experiments in electromagnetic induction • Rutherford’s comments on nuclear science in 1936 “of no practical value” • Mendel’s experiments on the genetics of sweet peas. He was told to “go plant more flowers in the garden”

  8. Basic research applications of gas exchange measurements: • Basic research on understanding photosynthesis - a reaction on which all life depends • Scientists want to study how plants grow, how ecosystems work. • Global Change research: how rising level of CO2 and temperature could affect agriculture, as well as the ecology (C3:C4 species balance).

  9. Applications of gas exchange • When choosing a topic for research, it is important to pick something which interests you.

  10. Checking the LI-6400 • How do you know if the LI-6400 is working properly? • Would you test it on a leaf to see if it reads photosynthesis correctly?

  11. LI-6400 system checklist

  12. Checking the LI-6400 Calibration • User calibration - setting zero and span • Does the LI-6400 IRGA needs factory calibration? • New internal chemicals? • How do you know?

  13. Examples of data with weaknesses

  14. Data Quality – avoiding noisy measurements Measurement precision and IRGA noise Typical IRGA noise of the LI-6400 is +/- 0.2 ppm. So the ∆CO2 fluctuates by +/- 0.2 ppm For a 5% measurement precision, DeltaCO2 should be ≥5 ppm (because 0.2/5 ≈ 5%).

  15. Data Quality – avoiding noisy measurements • If DeltaCO2 is only 1 ppm, then noise in photosynthesis will be 1 +/- 0.2 or 20% • If in above case flow is reduced to half, then DeltaCO2 will double to 2ppm, and noise in photosynthesis will be reduced to 2 +/- 0.2 or 10% • If in above case a 2 cm2 leaf area, is increased to 6 cm2 then deltaCO2 will increase to 6 ppm and reduce noise in photosynthesis to 6 +/- 0.2 or 3%

  16. Equation Summary Transpiration Photosynthesis

  17. Intercellular Water Vapor Water Vapor Mole Fraction Water

  18. Equation Summary -continued Stomatal Conductance - obtained by restating transpiration in terms of Ohms law

  19. Calculating Ci If assimilation is expressed in terms of Ohms law (i.e. in terms of internal leaf to chamber air CO2 concentration difference and stomatal conductance): Also it is known that gcs = gws/1.6

  20. 0 CO2 concentration in the mesophyll

  21. Energy Balance Leaf Temperature Measurement 0 = Q + L + R • R: Net radiation, made up of solar (total leaf absorption) and thermal (black body radiation balance from Tleaf, Tair, , and ) • L: Latent heat of vaporization: transpiration • Q: Sensible heat flux, a function of (Tleaf-Tair), specific heat capacity of the air, and one-sided boundary layer conductance of the leaf • Express R in terms of L & Q, solve for (Tleaf-Tair) to determine Tleaf

  22. Configuring the LI-6400 for surveys • RefCO2 - Ambient + expected Delta • Flow – fixed, high, but still adequate Deltas • Light – consider leaf and sun relation • Use prompts for data identification

  23. Configuring the LI-6400 for Light Curves • Constant Sample CO2 - not Reference CO2 • Why? • If choosing constant humidity, then start with high flow, and slow RESPNS • Fixed temperature • Going from high to low light levels is faster

  24. Configuring the LI-6400 for CO2 Response Curves • Allow plenty of time for leaf to acclimate to the light level • Matching IRGAs is very important • Measurements can be very fast as there is no need to wait for acclimation to changes in light • Diffusive leaks can be significant

  25. Photorespiration inhibition in a C3 leaf

  26. Effect of O2 concentration of a C4 leaf

  27. Diffusion Leaks

  28. Custom Chambers

  29. Stages of Photosynthesis

  30. Leaf Structure

  31. Chloroplast Structure The Light Reactions occur in the grana and the Dark Reactions take place in the stroma of the chloroplasts.

  32. Light Reaction Stages

  33. Fate of Absorbed Light • Typical for low light conditions: • 97% Photochemistry • 2.5% Heat • 0.5% Fluorescence • Under high light conditions: • low% Photochemistry • 95+% Heat • 2.5-5% Fluorescence

  34. 6400-40 Leaf Chamber Fluorometer • Red (630nm) • Blue (470nm) • Far red (740nm) • Fluorescence Detection at >715nm<1000nm

  35. Relative spectral outputs of the LCF

  36. Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) Measuring on, Actinic on Fm, Fm’ Light Intensity Fm Fm’ After demodulation F Measuring on, Actinic on Fs Fs Fo Fo’ Time Measuring On, Actinic off Fo, Fo’ 0

  37. Fluorescence Parameters - continued Also if it is assumed that the ratio of heat:fluorescence de-excitation remains constant (for a given state of the leaf), then: and Also P = 1 - F - H

  38. Fluorescence Parameters - continued If the F is measured on a dark-adapted leaf, then it is referred to as Fo and P becomes: Fv/Fm is the fraction of absorbed photons used for photochemistry for a dark adapted leaf. For most plants Fv/Fm is around 0.8 Under non-saturating steady-state photosynthesis the above equation takes the form:

  39. Other Fluorescence Parameters Another relation similar to is: The photochemical quenching of fluorescence, includes - photosnythesis and photorespiration The non-photochemical quenching of fluorescence – heat, etc. Another non-photochemical quenching parameter

  40. A Fluorescence Induction Curve

More Related