Plant Physiology 88:218-223 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists
Environmental and Stress Physiology
Effects of Air Pollutants on the Composition of Stable Carbon Isotopes, 13C, of Leaves and Wood, and on Leaf Injury 1
Bjorn Martin,
Andrzej Bytnerowicz and
Yvonne R. Thorstenson
Native Plants, Inc., 417 Wakara Way, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108,
Statewide Air Pollution Research Center, University of California, Riverside, California 9252
Air pollutants are known to cause visible leaf injury as well as impairment of photosynthetic CO2 fixation. Here we evaluate whether the effects on photosynthesis are large enough to cause changes in the relative composition of stable carbon isotopes, 13C, of plant tissue samples, and, if so, how the changes relate to visual leaf injury. For that purpose, several woody and herbaceous plant species were exposed to SO2 + O3 and SO2 + O3 + NO2 for one month (8 hours per day, 5 days per week). At the end of the fumigations, the plants were evaluated for visual leaf lesions, and 13C of leaf tissue was determined. Woody plants generally showed less visual leaf injury and smaller effects on 13C of pollutant exposure than did herbaceous plants. If 13C was affected by pollutants, it became, with few exceptions, less negative. The data from the fumigation experiments were consistent with 13C analyses of whole wood of annual growth rings from two conifer tree species, Pseudotsuga menziesii and Pinus strobus. These trees had been exposed until 1977 to exhaust gases from a gas plant at Lacq, France. Wood of both conifer species formed in the polluted air of 1972 to 1976 had less negative 13C values than had wood formed in the much cleaner air in 1982 to 1986. No similar, time-dependent differences in 13C of wood were observed in trees which had been continuously growing in clean air. Our 13C data from both relatively short-term artificial exposures and long-term natural exposure are consistent with greater stomatal limitation of photosynthesis in polluted air than in clean air.
1 This study was supported in part by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to B. M. (DE-ACOZ-86ER80374 Phase I), and in part by research funds from Societé Nationale Elf Aquitaine, Paris, France, to B. M.
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