## Detached leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi Hamet et Perrier kept in normal air show a single period of net CO2 fixation on transfer to constant darkness at temperatures in the range 0-25 ~ The duration of this initial fixation period is largely independent of temperature in the range 5-20 ~ bu
The role of the epidermis in the generation of the circadian rhythm of carbon dioxide fixation in leaves ofBryophyllum fedtschenkoi
โ Scribed by Malcolm B. Wilkins
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 760 KB
- Volume
- 185
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-0935
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โฆ Synopsis
The role of the epidermis in the generation of the endogenous circadian rhythm of CO2 exchange in leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi has been examined. At 25ยฐ C the rhythm of CO2 output exhibited by whole leaves kept in continuous darkness and an initially CO2-free air stream also occurs in isolated pieces of mesophyll. The sensitivity to light of the rhythms in whole leaves and in isolated mesophyll appears to be identical. At 15ยฐ C, however, no rhythm is observed in isolated mesophyll tissue, despite there being a conspicuous rhythm in intact leaves. The rhythm of net CO2 assimilation in whole leaves kept in continuous light and a stream of normal air at either 25ยฐ C or at 15ยฐ C is abolished by removal of the epidermis, although at 15ยฐ C and under the higher of the two light levels used, there is an indication that rhythmicity may begin to reappear after the third day of the experiment. Thus, only under certain environmental conditions is the rhythm of CO2 exchange in Bryophyllum leaves independent of the epidermis. The results indicate that the rhythm of carbon dioxide fixation in continuous darkness and CO2-free air is generated primarily in the mesophyll cells, whereas the rhythm in continuous light and normal air is generated in the stomatal guard cells or in an interaction of these cells with the mesophyll cells.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The rhythm of carbon dioxide output in Bryophyllum leaves was entrained on exposure to 0.25 h of white light every 24 h. Entrainment also occurred on similar exposure to monochromatic radiation in spectral bands centred at 660 nm and, to a lesser extent, at 730 nm, but a band centred at 450 nm was w
Detached shoots of iBryophyllum ]edtschenkoi maintained in a closed system in the light exhibited an endogenous circadian rhythm in CO 2 compensation. The rhythm was sensitive to changes in light intensity and temperature. At 15~ it damped rapidly in light of 78 J m -2 s -1, but at 10~ a rhythm of c
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