4.5 Article

Measuring the impact of flooding on Amazonian trees: photosynthetic response models for ten species flooded by hydroelectric dams

Journal

TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages 193-210

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00468-012-0788-2

Keywords

Apparent quantum yield; Carbon; Convexity term; Dark respiration; Global warming; Photosynthesis

Categories

Funding

  1. CNPq

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Increasing areas of Amazonian forest are coming under flood stress due to dam construction and greater variability in river flood levels due to climate change. The physiological responses of Amazonian trees subjected to flooding are important to understand the consequences of these changes. Irradiance response curves for photosynthesis obtained from ten tropical tree species growing in flooded areas were used to fit three empirical models. The study was done in floodplains along the Uatum River, both upstream and downstream of the Balbina Hydroelectric Dam in Brazil's state of Amazonas (01A degrees 55'S; 59A degrees 28'W). Ten species were studied. Models compared were: non-rectangular hyperbola, rectangular hyperbola, and exponential. All models were quantitatively adequate for fitting the response of measured data on photosynthesis to irradiance for all ten species in the non-flooding and flooding periods. Considerable variation was found among the model estimates of maximum photosynthesis (P (nmax)), dark respiration (R (d)) and apparent quantum yield of photosynthesis (alpha). For photosynthesis, the two hyperbolas overestimated P (nmax) while EXP presented more realistic values. For estimating R (d), RH presented the most realistic values. To avoid unrealistic value estimates of R (d), we recommend adding measured R (d) values to the regressions. The results suggest that the EXP model presented the most realistic P (nmax) and alpha values, and, in spite of less accuracy in fitting photosynthetic irradiance curves than the RH model, it can be recommended for accessing the information used in photosynthetic irradiance curves for the leaves of tropical trees growing in Amazonian floodplains or in areas that are artificially flooded by dams.

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