4.7 Article

Acclimation of photosynthesis to lightflecks in tomato leaves: interaction with progressive shading in a growing canopy

Journal

PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM
Volume 162, Issue 4, Pages 506-517

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppl.12668

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Funding

  1. Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
  2. Essent

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Plants in natural environments are often exposed to fluctuations in light intensity, and leaf-level acclimation to light may be affected by those fluctuations. Concurrently, leaves acclimated to a given light climate can become progressively shaded as new leaves emerge and grow above them. Acclimation to shade alters characteristics such as photosynthetic capacity. To investigate the interaction of fluctuating light and progressive shading, we exposed three-week old tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) plants to either lightflecks or constant light intensities. Lightflecks of 20s length and 1000mol m(-2)s(-1) peak intensity were applied every 5min for 16h per day, for 3 weeks. Lightfleck and constant light treatments received identical daily light sums (15.2mol m(-2)day(-1)). Photosynthesis was monitored in leaves 2 and 4 (counting from the bottom) during canopy development throughout the experiment. Several dynamic and steady-state characteristics of photosynthesis became enhanced by fluctuating light when leaves were partially shaded by the upper canopy, but much less so when they were fully exposed to lightflecks. This was the case for CO2-saturated photosynthesis rates in leaves 2 and 4 growing under lightflecks 14days into the treatment period. Also, leaf 2 of plants in the lightfleck treatment showed significantly faster rates of photosynthetic induction when exposed to a stepwise change in light intensity on day 15. As the plants grew larger and these leaves became increasingly shaded, acclimation of leaf-level photosynthesis to lightflecks disappeared. These results highlight continuous acclimation of leaf photosynthesis to changing light conditions inside developing canopies.

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