Abstract
The areal development of photosynthetic efficiency and growth patterns in expanding
leaves of two different dicotyledonous species - Coccoloba uvifera and Sanchezia nobilis - was investigated by imaging both processes repeatedly over 32 days. Measurements
were performed using combined imaging systems for chlorophyll fluorescence and growth,
with the same spatial resolution. Significant differences in potential quantum yield
of photosynthesis (Fv/Fm), a parameter indicating the functional status of photosystem II, were found between
midvein and interveinal tissue. Although base-tip gradients and spatial patchiness
were observed in the distribution of relative growth rate, neither midvein nor interveinal
tissue showed such patterns in Fv/Fm. In young leaves, Fv/Fm of the midvein was higher than Fv/Fm of interveinal tissue. This difference declined gradually with time, and upon cessation
of growth, Fv/Fm of interveinal regions exceeded those of midvein tissue. Images of chlorophyll fluorescence
quenching showed that ΔF/Fm′ in the different tissues correlated with Fv/Fm, indicating that, in these uniformly illuminated leaves, transitions in photosynthetic
electron transport activity follow those of predawn quantum efficiency. We explore
the implications of these observations during leaf development, discuss effects of
sucrose delivery from veins to interveinal areas on relative rates of photosynthetic
development in these tissues, and propose that the initially higher photosynthetic
activity in the midvein compared to the intervein tissues may supply carbohydrates
and energy for leaf growth processes.
Key words
Chlorophyll fluorescence - imaging - spatio-temporal dynamics - pattern formation
-
Coccoloba uvifera
-
Sanchezia nobilis.
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A. Walter
Institut für Phytosphäre (ICG-3)
Forschungszentrum Jülich
Stetternicher Forst
52425 Jülich
Germany
Email: a.walter@fz-juelich.de
Section Editor: M. C. Ball