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Transformation of Energy by Plants. Efficiency - How well do plants utilize the solar input?. Ecological (or Lindeman) efficiency (GPP/solar radiation) wild and cultivated plants ~1.6%. Assimilation efficiency - GPP/light absorbed 8% at full light to 18% in dim light.
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Efficiency - How well do plants utilize the solar input? • Ecological (or Lindeman) efficiency • (GPP/solar radiation) • wild and cultivated plants ~1.6%.
Assimilation efficiency - GPP/light absorbed • 8% at full light to 18% in dim light.
Assimilation efficiency - GPP/light absorbed • 8% at full light to 18% in dim light. • Light saturation point • Bonner hypothesis • Many temperate leaves: • Adapted to low light conditions
Chlorophyll concentration From AJB 92(2) - Jan 05
Biochemical efficiency • molecules of glucose produced/amt. of light absorbed by the photosystems. • Photosynthesis is most often limited by CO2 concentrations
Solar radiation within the forest • PAR is light at 380-710 nm - about 40% of the total irradiation reaching the plants
Leaf Area Index (LAI) • (Surface area of leaves over given area of ground)/(area of ground itself)
LAI Leaf Area LAI LAI=4.01
Light attenuation Typical LAI for deciduous forest = 3 to 5; for coniferous forest = 2 to 4; tropical rain forest = 6 to 10
Attenuation of PAR is dependent on: • LAI at a given level above the ground • Arrangement of leaves (multi- or monolayers) • Angle at which leaves are held to the horizontal. Very little light between 500 and 700 nm gets through the canopy.
Successional age • Eastern deciduous trees • # of layers also declines with successional age • Data from Henry Horn
Sunflects • Decrease as tree height & LAI increase • Short duration (1-30”) normally • Varies from 10-85% of daily photon flux density in a given area
Sunflects • Decrease as tree height & LAI increase • Short duration (1-30”) normally • Varies from 10-85% of daily photon flux density in a given area • Leaf “induction” important for efficiency • As duration efficiency of utilization
Leaf Unit Placement • Placed under gaps in upper layer • Under upper leaves - can receive light from three sources: • Passed through other leaves • Reflected off other surfaces • Direct light passing through
Umbra (RDZ) • Shadow cast by circle • Distance for influence to be gone • ~70*diameter • Clear day • Sun @ zenith
Leaf angle • Umbra decreases as a leaf orientation moves toward vertical
Henry Horn’s hypothesis • Trees growing in the open • leaves arranged in depth in a random array • Small leaves; irregular shape • LAI>1
Open sun plants Northern Red Oak Choke Cherry
Henry Horn’s hypothesis • Understory trees in dense shade • Leaves nonrandom; short vertical distance • Regular shape; larger than leaves in open • LAI~=<1 • Single branch of a tree adapted to growth in the open should cast less shade than a single branch adapted for dim light.
Growth Rate • R=E*F • F is comprised of: • Ratio of leaf wt. To plant wt. (LWR) • Ratio of leaf area to leaf weight or specific leaf area (SLA) • LWR is fairly steady • SLA can change markedly if plant is moved from sun to shade
C3 Mesophyll cell Mesophyll cell C4 Bundle sheath cell CAM Mesophyll cell
Larch Larch Red Maple Black Spruce Light absorption & height/radius ratio