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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Research Note: Measuring variability in chlorophyll-fluorescence-derived photosynthetic parameters in situ with a programmable multi-channel fluorometer

John W. Runcie and Martin J. Riddle

Functional Plant Biology 31(5) 559 - 562
Published: 02 June 2004

Abstract

A submersible device was constructed for simultaneous in situ measurement of the effective quantum yield of chlorophyll fluorescence (ΔF / Fm′) of eight macroalgal samples. The device incorporated a commercially available PAM fluorometer. Four samples each of the macroalgae Iridaea mawsonii (Lucas) and Monostroma hariotii (Gain) were examined. ΔF / Fm′ and light-response curves (LCs) were regularly applied over 24 h to estimate diel changes in relative electron transport rates and the relative efficiency of photon conversion at low irradiances (α), and the variance attributable to mean values of both ΔF / Fm′ and α were estimated. A second commercial single-channel fluorometer provided an independent measure of variability in LC parameters between individual samples, and the magnitude of this variability was within the range measured with the multi-channel device. Between-sample variability at noon, measured with the multi-channel device, was significantly greater than at other times of the day. ΔF / Fm′ of M. hariotii were not significantly different throughout most of the day except at midnight, when values were significantly higher. In contrast, over 24-h only ΔF / Fm′ of I. mawsonii at noon (growing in low light) was significantly lower. By providing replicate LCs at each time point, the programmable multi-channel fluorometer enables testing of significant differences in photosynthetic parameters over a diel period.

Keywords: Antarctic, in situ, macroalgae, PAM, quantum yield, rapid light curve.

https://doi.org/10.1071/FP03213

© CSIRO 2004

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