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Plant Physiology 61:510-514 (1978)
© 1978 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Resistance Analysis of Nocturnal Carbon Dioxide Uptake by a Crassulacean Acid Metabolism Succulent, Agave deserti 1

Park S. Nobel and Terry L. Hartsock

Division of Environmental Biology, Laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024

Nocturnal CO2 uptake by a Crassulacean acid metabolism succulent, Agave deserti Engelm. (Agavaceae), was measured so that the resistance properties of the mesophyll chlorenchyma cells and their CO2 concentrations could be determined. Two equivalents of acidity were produced at night per mole of CO2 taken up. The nocturnal CO2 uptake became light-saturated at 3.5 mEinsteins cm–2 of photosynthetically active radiation (400-700 nm) incident during the preceding day; at least 46 Einsteins were required per mole of CO2 fixed. Variations in the daytime leaf temperature between 20 and 37 C had little effect on nocturnal CO2 uptake. After the first few hours in the dark, the leaf liquid phase CO2 resistance (rliqCO2) and the CO2 concentration in the chlorenchyma cells (ciCO2) both increased, the latter usually reaching the ambient external CO2 level at the end of the dark period. Increasing the leaf surface temperature above 15 C at night markedly increased the stomatal resistance, rliqCO2, and ciCO2.

The minimum rliqCO2 at night was about 1.6 seconds cm–1. Based on the ratio of chlorenchyma surface area to total leaf surface area of 82, this rliqCO2 corresponded to a minimum cellular resistance of approximately 130 seconds cm–1, comparable to values for mesophyll cells of C3 plants. The contribution of the carboxylation reaction and/or other biochemical steps to rliqCO2 may increase appreciably as the nighttime temperature shifts a few degrees from the optimum or after a few hours in the dark, both of which caused large increases in rliqCO2. This necessitates a large internal leaf area for CO2 diffusion into the chlorenchyma to support moderate nocturnal CO2 uptake rates by these succulent leaves.


1 This investigation was supported by Energy Research and Development Administration Contract EY-76-C-03-0012.




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J. B. Skillman
Quantum yield variation across the three pathways of photosynthesis: not yet out of the dark
J. Exp. Bot., May 1, 2008; 59(7): 1647 - 1661.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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