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Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies

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Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies. / Townsend, Alexandra; Retkute, Renata; Chinnathambi, Kannan et al.
In: Plant Physiology, Vol. 176, No. 2, 06.02.2018, p. 1233-1246.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Townsend, A, Retkute, R, Chinnathambi, K, Randall, JWP, Foulkes, MJ, Carmo-Silva, AE & Murchie, E 2018, 'Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies', Plant Physiology, vol. 176, no. 2, pp. 1233-1246. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.17.01213

APA

Townsend, A., Retkute, R., Chinnathambi, K., Randall, J. WP., Foulkes, M. J., Carmo-Silva, A. E., & Murchie, E. (2018). Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies. Plant Physiology, 176(2), 1233-1246. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.17.01213

Vancouver

Townsend A, Retkute R, Chinnathambi K, Randall JWP, Foulkes MJ, Carmo-Silva AE et al. Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies. Plant Physiology. 2018 Feb 6;176(2):1233-1246. Epub 2017 Dec 7. doi: 10.1104/pp.17.01213

Author

Townsend, Alexandra ; Retkute, Renata ; Chinnathambi, Kannan et al. / Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies. In: Plant Physiology. 2018 ; Vol. 176, No. 2. pp. 1233-1246.

Bibtex

@article{446d1ba3af9f412f88ede5563c82adbe,
title = "Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies",
abstract = "Photosynthetic acclimation (photoacclimation) is the process whereby leaves alter their morphology and/or biochemistry to optimise photosynthetic efficiency and productivity according to long-term changes in the light environment. Three-dimensional (3D) architecture of plant canopies imposes complex light dynamics, but the drivers for photoacclimation in such fluctuating environments are poorly understood. A technique for high-resolution 3D reconstruction was combined with ray tracing to simulate a daily time course of radiation profiles for architecturally contrasting field-grown wheat canopies. An empirical model of photoacclimation was adapted to predict the optimal distribution of photosynthesis according to the fluctuating light patterns throughout the canopies. Whilst the photoacclimation model output showed good correlation with field-measured gas exchange data at the top of the canopy, it predicted a lower optimal light saturated rate of photosynthesis (Pmax) at the base. Leaf Rubisco and protein content were consistent with the measured Pmax. We conclude that although the photosynthetic capacity of leaves is high enough to exploit brief periods of high light within the canopy (particularly towards the base) the frequency and duration of such sunflecks are too small to make acclimation a viable strategy in terms of carbon gain. This suboptimal acclimation renders a large portion of residual photosynthetic capacity unused and reduces photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE) at the canopy level with further implications for photosynthetic productivity. It is argued that (a) this represents an untapped source of photosynthetic potential and (b) canopy nitrogen could be lowered with no detriment to carbon gain or grain protein content.",
author = "Alexandra Townsend and Renata Retkute and Kannan Chinnathambi and Randall, {Jamie WP} and Foulkes, {M. John} and Carmo-Silva, {Ana Elizabete} and Erik Murchie",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1104/pp.17.01213",
language = "English",
volume = "176",
pages = "1233--1246",
journal = "Plant Physiology",
issn = "0032-0889",
publisher = "American Society of Plant Biologists",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Suboptimal acclimation of photosynthesis to light in wheat canopies

AU - Townsend, Alexandra

AU - Retkute, Renata

AU - Chinnathambi, Kannan

AU - Randall, Jamie WP

AU - Foulkes, M. John

AU - Carmo-Silva, Ana Elizabete

AU - Murchie, Erik

PY - 2018/2/6

Y1 - 2018/2/6

N2 - Photosynthetic acclimation (photoacclimation) is the process whereby leaves alter their morphology and/or biochemistry to optimise photosynthetic efficiency and productivity according to long-term changes in the light environment. Three-dimensional (3D) architecture of plant canopies imposes complex light dynamics, but the drivers for photoacclimation in such fluctuating environments are poorly understood. A technique for high-resolution 3D reconstruction was combined with ray tracing to simulate a daily time course of radiation profiles for architecturally contrasting field-grown wheat canopies. An empirical model of photoacclimation was adapted to predict the optimal distribution of photosynthesis according to the fluctuating light patterns throughout the canopies. Whilst the photoacclimation model output showed good correlation with field-measured gas exchange data at the top of the canopy, it predicted a lower optimal light saturated rate of photosynthesis (Pmax) at the base. Leaf Rubisco and protein content were consistent with the measured Pmax. We conclude that although the photosynthetic capacity of leaves is high enough to exploit brief periods of high light within the canopy (particularly towards the base) the frequency and duration of such sunflecks are too small to make acclimation a viable strategy in terms of carbon gain. This suboptimal acclimation renders a large portion of residual photosynthetic capacity unused and reduces photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE) at the canopy level with further implications for photosynthetic productivity. It is argued that (a) this represents an untapped source of photosynthetic potential and (b) canopy nitrogen could be lowered with no detriment to carbon gain or grain protein content.

AB - Photosynthetic acclimation (photoacclimation) is the process whereby leaves alter their morphology and/or biochemistry to optimise photosynthetic efficiency and productivity according to long-term changes in the light environment. Three-dimensional (3D) architecture of plant canopies imposes complex light dynamics, but the drivers for photoacclimation in such fluctuating environments are poorly understood. A technique for high-resolution 3D reconstruction was combined with ray tracing to simulate a daily time course of radiation profiles for architecturally contrasting field-grown wheat canopies. An empirical model of photoacclimation was adapted to predict the optimal distribution of photosynthesis according to the fluctuating light patterns throughout the canopies. Whilst the photoacclimation model output showed good correlation with field-measured gas exchange data at the top of the canopy, it predicted a lower optimal light saturated rate of photosynthesis (Pmax) at the base. Leaf Rubisco and protein content were consistent with the measured Pmax. We conclude that although the photosynthetic capacity of leaves is high enough to exploit brief periods of high light within the canopy (particularly towards the base) the frequency and duration of such sunflecks are too small to make acclimation a viable strategy in terms of carbon gain. This suboptimal acclimation renders a large portion of residual photosynthetic capacity unused and reduces photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE) at the canopy level with further implications for photosynthetic productivity. It is argued that (a) this represents an untapped source of photosynthetic potential and (b) canopy nitrogen could be lowered with no detriment to carbon gain or grain protein content.

U2 - 10.1104/pp.17.01213

DO - 10.1104/pp.17.01213

M3 - Journal article

VL - 176

SP - 1233

EP - 1246

JO - Plant Physiology

JF - Plant Physiology

SN - 0032-0889

IS - 2

ER -