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Short-term thermal acclimation of dark respiration is greater in non-photosynthetic than in photosynthetic tissues

Authors :
Nicholas G. Smith
Jeffrey S. Dukes
Guoyong Li
Source :
AoB Plants
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

Thermal acclimation of plant respiration is highly relevant to climate projections; when included in models, it reduces the future rate of atmospheric CO2 rise. Although all living plant tissues respire, few studies have examined differences in acclimation among tissues, and leaf responses have received greater attention than stems and roots. Here, we examine the short-term temperature acclimation of leaf, stem and root respiration within individuals of eight disparate species acclimated to five temperatures, ranging from 15 to 35 °C. To assess acclimation, we measured instantaneous tissue temperature response curves (14–50 °C) on each individual following a 7-day acclimation period. In leaves and photosynthetic stems, the acclimation temperature had little effect on the instantaneous tissue temperature response of respiration, indicating little to no thermal acclimation in these tissues. However, respiration did acclimate in non-photosynthetic tissues; respiratory rates measured at the acclimation temperature were similar across the different acclimation temperatures. Respiratory demand of photosynthetic tissue increased with acclimation temperature as a result of increased photosynthetic demands, resulting in rates measured at the acclimation temperature that increased with increasing acclimation temperature. In non-photosynthetic tissue, the homeostatic response of respiration suggests that acclimation temperature had little influence on respiratory demand. Our results indicate that respiratory temperature acclimation differs by tissue type and that this difference is the consequence of the coupling between photosynthesis and respiration in photosynthetic, but not non-photosynthetic tissue. These insights provide an avenue for improving the representation of respiratory temperature acclimation in large-scale models.<br />Our study found that temperature acclimation of respiration differs by tissue type (i.e. leaves, stems and roots). Tissue that does not photosynthesize was found to have more homeostatic responses to temperature than photosynthetic tissue. This was found due to the strong linkage between photosynthetic biochemistry and respiration fluxes. These results suggest that plant respiratory responses to changing temperatures, such as future warming, will be tissue type-specific. The link to photosynthesis found in our study provides an avenue for improving the representation of these responses in carbon cycle models.

Details

ISSN :
20412851
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AoB PLANTS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aef9e254eabc05272d7b1670be2ff48a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plz064