Carbohydrate saving or biomass maintenance: which is the main determinant of the plant’s long-term submergence tolerance?
Autor: | Fangqing Chen, Wah Soon Chow, Zhaojia Li, Mengmeng Zhang, Zongqiang Xie, Da-Yong Fan |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Biomass (ecology) geography geography.geographical_feature_category Perennial plant Plant physiology Wetland Cell Biology Plant Science General Medicine Biology Photosynthesis 01 natural sciences Biochemistry 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology Agronomy Temperate climate Ecosystem 010606 plant biology & botany Riparian zone |
Zdroj: | Photosynthesis Research. 149:155-170 |
ISSN: | 1573-5079 0166-8595 |
Popis: | It is hypothesized that plant submergence tolerance could be assessed from the decline of plant biomass due to submergence, as biomass integrates all eco-physiological processes leading to fitness. An alternative hypothesis stated that the consumption rate of carbohydrate is essential in differing tolerance to submergence. In the present study, the responses of biomass, biomass allocation, and carbohydrate content to simulated long-term winter submergence were assessed in four tolerant and four sensitive perennials. The four tolerant perennials occur in a newly established riparian ecosystem created by The Three Gorges Dam, China. They had 100% survival after 120 days’ simulated submergence, and had full photosynthesis recovery after 30 days’ re-aeration, and the photosynthetic rate was positively related to the growth during the recovery period. Tolerant perennials were characterized by higher carbohydrate levels, compared with the four sensitive perennials (0% survival) at the end of submergence. Additionally, by using a method which simulates posterior estimates, and bootstraps the confidence interval for the difference between strata means, it was found that the biomass response to post-hypoxia, rather than that to submergence, could be a reliable indicator to assess submergence tolerance. Interestingly, the differences of changes in carbohydrate content between tolerant and sensitive perennials during submergence were significant, which were distinct from the biomass response, supporting the hypothesis that tolerant perennials could sacrifice non-vital components of biomass to prioritize the saving of carbohydrates for later recovery. Our study provides some insight into the underlying mechanism(s) of perennials’ tolerance to submergence in ecosystems such as temperate wetland and reservoir riparian. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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