Growth rates in terms of area expansion per 30 min were measured
in
the red alga Porphyra leucosticta under different light/dark
(LD)
cycles, irradiance levels and light qualities. Twelve hours per day
under white light (35 μmol m−2 s−1)
promoted a dramatic and rapid
increase in thallus expansion during the first part of the
light period followed by low values during the remaining light and dark
phase.
Light/dark regimes of 8[ratio ]8 h, 6[ratio ]6 h, 3[ratio ]3 h and
1·5[ratio ]1·5 h resulted in a discontinuous
growth pattern where thallus expansion was restricted
to the light phase while no growth occurred in the dark phase, and there
was
even a significant thallus contraction just after light-off.
Growth rates in terms of percentage area increased with irradiance at
LD 12[ratio ]12. This was due to: (1) the phase of high growth rate
following the initial ‘morning peak’ extending from the first
6 h of the light phase to cover almost the entire light phase, and (2)
an
increase in growth rate during the second half of the night phase.
Saturation was reached at an irradiance of 125 μmol m−2
s−1. An irradiance of 500 μmol m−2
s−1 decreased thallus expansion rate during the light
and dark
culture phases relative to the other irradiances
used. Light quality also caused changes in growth rate: the maximum
value was reached under yellow light followed by red; both of
these were higher than the growth rate under white light. Blue light
(35 μmol m−2 s−1) caused a decrease
of
more than 50% in thallus
expansion compared with white or red light due to a very dramatic decrease
in
the ‘morning peak’ of thallus expansion and very low
values in the rest of the light and dark phases. Increasing the percentage
of blue light in different white light sources also decreased
thallus expansion. It is suggested that light influences the growth of
Porphyra in three ways: as an external signal matching thallus
expansion with light and dark cycles; as an energy source
promoting thallus expansion with increasing irradiance; and, at a
morphogenetic level, inhibiting growth in blue light.