Title: Plant Ecology - Chapter 2
1Plant Ecology - Chapter 2
2Photosynthesis Light
- Functional ecology - how the biochemistry and
physiology of individual plants determine their
responses to their environment, within the
structural context of their anatomy and morphology
3Photosynthesis Light
- Functional ecology - closely related to
physiological ecology, which focuses on
physiological mechanisms underlying whole-plant
responses to their environment
4Photosynthesis Light
- Photosynthesis is a package deal
- How much light
- Competitors
- Limitations (pollution, pathogens)
- Herbivores
- Plants must cope with multiple items at same time
5Process of Photosynthesis
- Biochemical process to acquire energy from sun,
carbon from atmosphere - 2 parts
- Capture of energy (light reactions)
- Storage of energy into formed organic molecules
(carbon fixation)
6Process of Photosynthesis
- Reactions take place in chloroplasts
- Light reactions on thylakoid membranes
- Carbon fixation (Calvin cycle) within the stroma
7Process of Photosynthesis
- Light reactions involve pigment molecules
- Many forms of chlorophyll
- Accessory pigments (carotenoids and xanthophylls
in terrestrial plants)
8Process of Photosynthesis
- Pigment molecules arranged into two molecular
complexes - Photosystems I and II
- Capture energy (form ATP, NADPH) plus generate
oxygen
9Process of Photosynthesis
- Energy captured from light reactions powers the
Calvin cycle - Captured energy ultimately stored in chemical
bonds of carbohydrates, other organic molecules
10Rates of Photosynthesis
- Gross photosynthesis - total amount of carbon
captured - Cellular respiration - organic compounds broken
down to release energy - Net photosynthesis - gross photosynthesis minus
respiration
11Rates of Photosynthesis
- Basic limiting factor - amount of light energy
reaching thylakoid membranes - Darkness - loss of energy due to respiration -
giving off CO2 - Low light - respiration plus some photosynthesis
- giving off and taking up CO2 - Compensation point
12Rates of Photosynthesis
- Strong light - respiration plus photosynthesis -
giving off and taking up CO2, up to a point - Maximum rate of photosynthesis, despite further
increase in light energy
13Rates of Photosynthesis
- Different plants have different photosynthetic
responses to same light intensity - Some do better under low light, others strong
light - Habitat - shade vs. sun
- Some can shift light compensation point to deal
with changes in light availability (lots in
spring, less in summer in shade)
14Quality of Light
- Light quality (availability of different
wavelengths) can limit rate of photosynthesis - Blue and red wavelengths are captured
preferentially - Green wavelengths are discarded (green plants)
15Global Light Availability
- Tropical latitudes - day and night equal
- Polar latitudes - continuously light at
midsummer, continuously dark at midwinter - Maximum sunlight energy greater in tropics than
polar regions
16Global Light Availability
- Maximum sunlight energy greater at high altitudes
than at sea level - Damaging UV-B radiation greater in tropics than
polar regions, high elevations vs. low elevations - Biochemical protection flavonoids to absorb,
antioxidant and DNA repair enzymes
17CO2 Uptake Limitations
- CO2 diffusion from surrounding air into leaf and
into chloroplast - Leaf conductance - rate at which CO2 flows into
the leaf - Mostly under control of stomata
18CO2 Uptake Limitations
- Stomata open, close to maintain water balance
(seconds, minutes) - Stomata change as leaf morphology, chemistry
change (days, months) - Natural selection modifies (100s, 1000s of years)
19CO2 Uptake Limitations
- Controlling water loss is main reason why plants
restrict their CO2 uptake - Huge amount of air required for photosynthesis -
2500 L air for each gram of glucose produced
20CO2 Uptake Limitations
- Stomata can be very dynamic, opening and closing
constantly to regulate CO2 and water loss - Much variation even within same leaf
- Patchy closure also common in stressed plants
21Variation in Photosynthetic Rates Habitats
- Photosynthetic rates vary within and among
habitats - Correlated with species composition, habitat
preferences, growth rates
22Variation in Photosynthetic Rates Habitats
- Photosynthetic rates may be unrelated to species
distributions, populations processes - Other important components of photosynthesis
total leaf area, length of time leaves active,
maintained
23Photosynthetic Pathways
- Carbon fixation done using 3 different pathways
- C3
- C4
- CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism)
24Photosynthetic Pathways
- C3 and C4 named for 3-carbon and 4-carbon stable
molecules first formed in these pathways - CAM named after plant family Crassulaceae where
it was first discovered
25Photosynthetic Pathways
- Most plants use C3 photosynthesis, and plants
that use it are found everywhere - C4 and CAM are modifications of C3, and evolved
from it
26Photosynthetic Pathways
- C3 CO2 joined to 5-carbon molecule with assist
from the enzyme RuBP carboxylase/oxygenase -
rubisco - Rubisco probably most abundant protein on earth,
but does its job very poorly
27Photosynthetic Pathways
- Rubisco inefficient at capturing CO2
- Also takes up O2 during photorespiration
- O2 uptake favored over CO2 uptake as temperatures
increase - Limits photosynthesis
- Plants must have HUGE amounts of rubisco,
especially those in warm, bright habitats, to
compensate for poor performance
28Photosynthetic Pathways
- Increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations
should allow C3 plants to increase rates of
photosynthesis
29Photosynthetic Pathways
- C4 photosynthesis contains additional step used
for initial CO2 capture - 3-carbon PEP (phosphoenol-pyruvate) CO2
4-carbon OAA (oxaloacetate) - Catalyzed by PEP carboxylate
30Photosynthetic Pathways
- PEP carboxylate only captures CO2
- Higher affinity for CO2 than rubisco
- Not affected by warmer temperatures
- Decarboxylation (CO2 removal) process allows
standard Calvin cycle (including rubisco)
31Photosynthetic Pathways
- C4 requires special leaf anatomy
- Spatial separation of C4 and C3 reactions
- Rubisco exposed only to CO2, not O2 in atmosphere
like in C3 plant
32Photosynthetic Pathways
- C4 Mesophyll cells for carbon fixation, bundle
sheath cells for Calvin cycle - keeps O2 away
from Calvin cycle - C3 Mesophyll cells for carbon fixation and
Calvin cycle - allows O2 access to Calvin cycle
33Photosynthetic Pathways
- C4 plants generally have higher maximum rates of
photosynthesis, and have higher temperature
optima
34Photosynthetic Pathways
- C4 plants generally do not become
light-saturated, even in full sunlight - Also have better nitrogen use and water use
efficiencies because of reduced needs for rubisco
(1/3 to 1/6)
35Photosynthetic Pathways
- Requires additional energy to run C4 pathway, but
easily compensated for by photosynthetic gains at
high light levels - Very successful in warm, full-light habitats,
e.g., deserts
36Photosynthetic Pathways
- CAM photosynthesis - Crassulacean acid metabolism
- Uses basically same biochemistry as C4, but in
very different way - Rubisco found in all photosynthetic cells, not
just bundle sheath cells
37Photosynthetic Pathways
- CAM uses temporal separation of light capture,
carbon fixation rather than spatial separation as
in C4 - CO2 captured at night, converted into organic
acids
38Photosynthetic Pathways
- During daylight, organic acids broken down to
release carbon, used normally in Calvin cycle - Stomata remain closed during day
39Photosynthetic Pathways
- CAM plants have thick, succulent tissues to allow
for organic acid storage overnight - Tremendous water use efficiency (stomata closed
during heat of day)
40Photosynthetic Pathways
- Some CAM plants not obligated to just CAM
- Can use C3 photosynthesis during day if
conditions are right, to achieve higher rates of
photosynthesis - CAM cant accumulate carbon as fast as C3 or C4
plants, lowering rate of photosynthesis
41C3, C4, and CAM
- C3 plants most abundant ( of species, total
biomass) - More CAM species than C4 species
- CAM plants less abundant than C4 in biomass,
worldwide distribution
42C3, C4, and CAM
- Half of grass species are C4
- Dominate warm grassland ecosystems
- Warm, bright conditions where C4 is favored
43C3, C4, and CAM
- CAM plants typically are succulents in desert
habitats, or
44C3, C4, and CAM
- Epiphytes growing on trees in tropics or
subtropics - Both types experience severe water shortages
45C3, C4, and CAM
- Phenology - seasonal timing of seasonal events
- C3 plants typically more springtime, vs. C4
plants being mostly summer
46C3, C4, and CAM
- C4 grasses are most common where summer
temperatures are warm in N. America
47C3, C4, and CAM
- C3 grasses - cool, winter-moist
- C4 grasses - warm, summer-moist
48C3, C4, and CAM
49Sun Shade Leaves
50Sun Shade Leaves
51Sun Shade Leaves
Higher light saturation levels Greater maximum
photosynthetic rates
52Species Adaptations-Sun
Solar tracking increases light availability
53Species Adaptations-Shade
Velvety, satiny leaf surfaces, blue iridescence
on leaf enhance available light
54Species Adaptations-Shade
Shade species use brief sunflecks with high
efficiency stomata open slow loss of
photosynthetic induction
55Species Adaptations-Ecotypes?
Genetically distinct populations of same
species adapted to low- and high-light
conditions? Phenotypic plasticity
56Daylength
- Flowering, seed dormancy, seed germination, other
physiological responses of plants controlled by
daylength (actually nightlength) - More reliable predictor of seasonal change than
temperature - Ratio of two forms of phytochrome A controlled by
length of dark period