Responses of gas exchange and photosynthesis to changes in
CO2 concentration and PPFD were examined in well
watered plants of Delosperma tradescantioides Bgr. to
establish the relative importance of these environmental
changes on the photosynthetic machinery in this CAM-cycling species which
grows naturally in both exposed and
partly shaded environments. Plants were grown at two PPFDs (220 [LL]
and
550 [HL] μmol m−2 s−1).
HL plants
had larger leaves with higher specific weight, water content and
diurnal malic acid fluctuation. Photosynthetic
PPFD responses were typically those of sun and shade species for HL and
LL
plants, both under 21% O2 and
non-photorespiratory (2% O2) conditions. The CO2
compensation point in the absence of non-photorespirational
CO2 evolution in the light (Γ∗) was c.
30
μmol mol−1. Irradiation reduced mitochondrial respiration
by >50%.
Comparison of the PPFD responses of linear electron flow rates
derived from gas exchange measurements and
from fluorescence analysis ([Jscr ]F) indicated effective
photosynthetic control. [Jscr ]F was always larger than
electron flow
rates calculated from gas exchange, indicating that processes other than
carboxylation and oxygenation were
consistently important in energy consumption under all sampled environmental
conditions. Regardless of PPFD
during growth, electron flow to carboxylation and [Jscr ]F
were linearly correlated, demonstrating that the
photosynthetic apparatus was well adapted to PPFD during growth. In HL
plants, non-photochemical quenching
increased, and photochemical quenching and the quantum yield of linear
electron transport through PS II
decreased more slowly with increasing PPFD than in LL plants. In plants
of both treatments non-photochemical
energy dissipation seemed to be exhausted when the proportion of photons
not utilizable by photochemistry
exceeded 0·7. Results illustrate a pronounced ability of
D. tradescantioides to acclimate to a 100% change in the
prevailing PPFD and lend support to the hypothesis that CAM cycling
might act as a photoprotective process.