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Journal of Experimental Botany 2009 60(8):2407-2418; doi:10.1093/jxb/erp093
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© The Author [2009]. Published by Oxford University Press [on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology]. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

This article appears in the following Journal of Experimental Botany issue: Special Issue: Mesophyll conductance to CO2: mechanisms, modelling, and ecological implications [View the issue table of contents]

Mesophyll Conductance in Field Stressful Environments

Seasonal time-course of gradients of photosynthetic capacity and mesophyll conductance to CO2 across a beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) canopy

Pierre Montpied1,2,*, André Granier1,2 and Erwin Dreyer1,2,*

1INRA, UMR 1137, Ecologie et Ecophysiologie Forestières, F-54280 Champenoux, France
2Nancy-Université, UMR 1137, Ecologie et Ecophysiologie Forestières, F-54500 Vandoeuvre les Nancy, France

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: montpied{at}nancy.inra.fr or dreyer{at}nancy.inra.fr

Leaf photosynthesis is known to acclimate to the actual irradiance received by the different layers of a canopy. This acclimation is usually described in terms of changes in leaf structure, and in photosynthetic capacity. Photosynthetic capacity is likely to be affected by mesophyll conductance to CO2 which has seldom been assessed in tree species, and whose plasticity in response to local irradiance is still poorly known. Structural [N and chlorophyll content, leaf mass to area ratio (LMA)] and functional leaf traits [maximum carboxylation rate (Vcmax), maximum light-driven electron flux (Jmax), and mesophyll conductance (gi)] were assessed by measuring leaf response curves of net CO2 assimilation versus intercellular CO2 partial pressure, along a vertical profile across a beech canopy, and by fitting a version of the Farquhar model including gi. The measurements were repeated five times during a growth season to catch potential seasonal variation. Irradiance gradients resulted in large decreasing gradients of LMA, gi, Vcmax, and Jmax. Relative allocation of leaf N to the different photosynthetic processes was only slightly affected by local irradiance. Seasonal changes after leaf expansion and before induction of leaf senescence were only minor. Structural equation modelling confirmed that LMA was the main driving force for changes in photosynthetic traits, with only a minor contribution of leaf Nitrogen content. In conclusion, mesophyll conductance to CO2 displays a large plasticity that scales with photosynthetic capacity across a tree canopy, and that it is only moderately (if at all) affected by seasonal changes in the absence of significant soil water depletion.

Key words: Canopy, European beech, irradiance, leaf structure, LMA, mesophyll conductance, photosynthetic capacity, plasticity

Received 26 November 2008; Accepted 25 February 2009


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