Forests, Free Full-Text

Por um escritor misterioso
Last updated 05 julho 2024
Forests, Free Full-Text
Thermal dissipation of excess excitation energy is an important photoprotective mechanism that plants have evolved to cope with surplus illumination. However, light-energy-partitioning dynamics in an exotic sand-dune willow (Salix psammophila) commonly used in restoring and/or stabilizing sand lands in northwestern China is largely unknown. In this study, chlorophyll fluorescence (ChlF) of photosystem II (PSII) was continuously monitored in situ in Salix psammophila to investigate plant acclimation processes driven by excessive solar radiation and extreme air temperatures (Ta). As part of a heat-regulation mechanism, energy partitioning is shown to vary with prevailing environmental conditions. In this investigation, energy absorbed during periods of moderate photosynthetically active radiation (PAR < 1200 μmoL·m−2·s−1) was largely allocated towards photochemistry (ΦPSII) with nominal amounts to thermal dissipation through reversible thermal dissipation (ΦNPQr). In extremely high solar radiation (PAR > 1500 μmoL·m−2·s−1) or in a cold temperature (Ta < 0 °C), more energy was dissipated by way of non-regulated thermal energy (Φf,D) and sustained thermal dissipation (ΦNPQs), leading to non-reversible photoinhibition or photodamage. This was mainly as a result of the low utilization and high absorption of light energy by PSII under cold conditions and physiologically-induced vulnerability. It was concluded that Salix psammophila had a clear tolerance to high temperatures and moderate solar radiation, but tended to be more vulnerable to high solar radiation and cold temperature. Based on species sensitivity to extreme environmental conditions, practical application and extension of Salix psammophila for land-restoration purposes should be approached cautiously, especially in high-latitude or high-altitude desert ecosystems commonly affected by events of high solar radiation and cold temperature.
Forests, Free Full-Text
Harvard Forest
Forests, Free Full-Text
Better Place Forests Memorial Trees for Cremation Ashes
Forests, Free Full-Text
Forests, Free Full-Text
Forests, Free Full-Text
550+ Forest Background Pictures Download Free Images on Unsplash
Forests, Free Full-Text
350+ Stunning Forest Pictures [HQ]
Forests, Free Full-Text
Do Trees Talk to Each Other?, Science
Forests, Free Full-Text
Review: The Forest app helps you go phone-free by planting trees
Forests, Free Full-Text
60,000+ Best Forest Photos · 100% Free Download · Pexels Stock Photos
Forests, Free Full-Text
Share of land covered by forest, 2020
Forests, Free Full-Text
Transforming food systems with trees and forests - The Lancet
Forests, Free Full-Text
European primary forest database v2.0
Forests, Free Full-Text
Forests, Free Full-Text

© 2014-2024 shop.imlig.com. All rights reserved.