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

Effect of light and CO2 on inorganic carbon uptake in the invasive aquatic CAM-plant Crassula helmsii

Signe Koch Klavsen A C and Stephen C. Maberly B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Biological Sciences, Aarhus University, Plant Biology, Ole Worms Allé 1135, 8000 Aarhus C, DK-Denmark.

B Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Lancaster Environment Centre, Library Avenue, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4AP, UK.

C Corresponding author. Email: signe.klavsen@biology.au.dk

Functional Plant Biology 37(8) 737-747 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP09281
Submitted: 16 November 2009  Accepted: 30 March 2010   Published: 26 July 2010

Abstract

Crassula helmsii (T. Kirk) Cockayne is an invasive aquatic plant in Europe that can suppress many native species because it can grow at a large range of dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations and light levels. One reason for its ecological success may be the possession of a regulated Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM), which allows aquatic macrophytes to take up CO2 in the night in addition to the daytime. The effect of light and CO2 on the regulation of CAM and photosynthesis in C. helmsii was investigated to characterise how physiological acclimation may confer this ecological flexibility. After 3 weeks of growth at high light (230 µmol photon m–2 s–1), C. helmsii displayed 2.8 times higher CAM at low compared with high CO2 (22 v. 230 mmol m–3). CAM was absent in plants grown at low light (23 µmol photon m–2 s–1) at both CO2 concentrations. The observed regulation patterns are consistent with CAM acting as a carbon conserving mechanism. For C. helmsii grown at high light and low CO2, mean photosynthetic rates were relatively high at low concentrations of CO2 and were on average 80 and 102 µmol O2 g–1 DW h–1 at CO2 concentrations of 3 and 22 mmol m–3 CO2, which, together with mean final pH values of 9.01 in the pH drift, indicate a low CO2 compensation point (<3 mmol m–3) but do not indicate use of bicarbonate as an additional source of exogenous inorganic carbon. The relatively high photosynthetic rates during the entire daytime were caused by internally derived CAM-CO2 and uptake from the external medium. During decarboxylation, CO2 generated from CAM contributed up to 29% to photosynthesis, whereas over a day the contribution to the carbon balance was ≤13%. The flexible adjustment of CAM and the ability to maintain photosynthesis at very low external CO2 concentrations, partly by making use of internally generated CO2 via CAM, may contribute to the broad ecological niche of C. helmsii.

Additional keywords: acclimation, bicarbonate uptake, Crassulacean acid metabolism, freshwater macrophyte, photosynthesis.


Acknowledgements

This study was funded by the Faculty of Natural Sciences, Aarhus University and SOAS (International School of Aquatic Sciences). We thank Tom V. Madsen for helpful discussions and comments on the manuscript.


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