Photoprotective carotenoids and antioxidants are more affected by canopy position than by nitrogen supply in 21-year-old Pinus radiata
Sabine Posch A B E , Charles R. Warren C , Mark A. Adams D and Helmut Guttenberger BA School of Forest and Ecosystem Science, The University of Melbourne, Water Street, Creswick, Vic. 3363, Australia.
B Department for Plant Sciences, Karl-Franzens-University Graz, Schubertstraße 51, 8010 Graz, Austria.
C School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Heydon-Laurence Building A08, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
D School of Biological Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
E Corresponding author. Email: sposch@unimelb.edu.au
F This paper originates from a presentation at EcoFIZZ 2007, Richmond, New South Wales, Australia, September 2007.
Functional Plant Biology 35(6) 470-482 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP08124
Submitted: 14 April 2008 Accepted: 4 June 2008 Published: 4 August 2008
Abstract
Photoprotection, light harvesting and light utilisation were investigated as a function of variation in N supply and canopy position in 21-year-old Pinus radiata D. Don. Chlorophyll fluorescence, gas exchange and photoprotective compounds were measured on lower, middle and upper canopy needles in trees receiving N fertiliser and in control trees not receiving N fertiliser. Irrespective of canopy height, additional N increased the light-harvesting capacity through greater contents of chlorophyll, neoxanthin and lutein, but did not affect light-utilisation processes, such as effective quantum yield of PSII or rates of net CO2 assimilation. Additional N fertiliser did not affect the concentrations of the measured photoprotective carotenoids (violaxanthin, antheraxanthin, zeaxanthin, α-carotene and β-carotene) or antioxidants (ascorbic acid, glutathione and α-tocopherol); however, carotenoids and antioxidants were strongly affected by canopy height and increased in concentration with increasing canopy height. The present study found that pools of photoprotective carotenoids and antioxidants were not driven by imbalances in light-harvesting and light-utilisation processes, but rather by gradients in light.
Additional keywords: α-tocopherol, ascorbic acid, chlorophyll a fluorescence, chloroplast pigments, gas exchange, glutathione.
Acknowledgements
We thank Hancock Victorian Plantations and Jörg Kruse for providing the plantation, Phil Gerschwitz for excellent assistance in the field and Klaus Remele for excellent technical support in the laboratory. Sabine Posch gratefully acknowledges financial support of a DOC scholarship from the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
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