PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 115, Issue 2 599-607, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Plant Biologists
|
WHOLE PLANT, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND STRESS PHYSIOLOGY |
Impacts of CO2 Enrichment on Productivity and Light Requirements of Eelgrass
R. C. Zimmerman, D. G. Kohrs, D. L. Steller and R. S. Alberte
Biology Department, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024 (R.C.Z., D.G.K., R.S.A.)
Seagrasses, although well adapted for submerged existence, are CO2-limited
and photosynthetically inefficient in seawater. This leads to high light
requirements for growth and survival and makes seagrasses vulnerable to
light limitation. We explored the long-term impact of increased CO2
availability on light requirements, productivity, and C allocation in
eelgrass (Zostera marina L.). Enrichment of seawater CO2 increased
photosynthesis 3-fold, but had no long-term impact on respiration. By
tripling the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis, CO2 enrichment reduced
the daily period of irradiance-saturated photosynthesis (Hsat) that is
required for the maintenance of positive whole-plant C balance from 7 to
2.7 h, allowing plants maintained under 4 h of Hsat to perform like plants
growing in unenriched seawater with 12 h of Hsat. Eelgrass grown under 4 h
of Hsat without added CO2 consumed internal C reserves as photosynthesis
rates and chlorophyll levels dropped. Growth ceased after 30 d. Leaf
photosynthesis, respiration, chlorophyll, and sucrose-phosphate synthase
activity of CO2-enriched plants showed no acclimation to prolonged
enrichment. Thus, the CO2-stimulated improvement in photosynthesis reduced
light requirements in the long term, suggesting that globally increasing
CO2 may enhance seagrass survival in eutrophic coastal waters, where
populations have been devastated by algal proliferation and reduced
water-column light transparency.