Cavender-Bares Jeannine
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, 1987 Upper Buford Circle, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Photosynth Res. 2007 Nov-Dec;94(2-3):437-53. doi: 10.1007/s11120-007-9215-8. Epub 2007 Sep 5.
Sensitivity to cold and freezing differs between populations within two species of live oaks (Quercus section Virentes Nixon) corresponding to the climates from which they originate. Two populations of Quercus virginiana (originating from North Carolina and north central Florida) and two populations of the sister species, Q. oleoides, (originating from Belize and Costa Rica) were grown under controlled climate regimes simulating tropical and temperate conditions. Three experiments were conducted in order to test for differentiation in cold and freezing tolerance between the two species and between the two populations within each species. In the first experiment, divergences in response to cold were tested for by examining photosystem II (PS II) photosynthetic yield (delta F/F m') and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of plants in both growing conditions after short-term exposure to three temperatures (6, 15 and 30 degrees C) under moderate light (400 micromol m(-2 )s(-1)). Without cold acclimation (tropical treatment), the North Carolina population showed the highest photosynthetic yield in response to chilling temperatures (6 degrees C). Both ecotypes of both species showed maximum delta F/F m' and minimum NPQ at their daytime growth temperatures (30 degrees C and 15 degrees C for the tropical and temperate treatments, respectively). Under the temperate treatment where plants were allowed to acclimate to cold, the Q. virginiana populations showed greater NPQ under chilling temperatures than Q. oleoides populations, suggesting enhanced mechanisms of photoprotective energy dissipation in the more temperate species. In the second and third experiments, inter- and intra-specific differentiation in response to freezing was tested for by examining dark-adapted F v/F m before and after overnight freezing cycles. Without cold acclimation, the extent of post-freezing declines in F v/F m were dependent on the minimum freezing temperature (0, -2, -5 or -10 degrees C) for both populations in both species. The most marked declines in F v/F m occurred after freezing at -10 degrees C, measured 24 h after freezing. These declines were continuous and irreversible over the time period. The North Carolina population, however, which represents the northern range limit of Q. virginiana, showed significantly less decline in F v/F m than the north central Florida population, which in turn showed a lower decline in Fv/F m than the two Q. oleoides populations from Belize and Costa Rica. In contrast, after exposure to three months of chilling temperatures (temperate treatment), the two Q. virginiana populations showed no decline in F v/F m after freezing at -10 degrees C, while the two Q. oleoides populations showed declines in F v/F m reaching 0.2 and 0.1 for Costa Rica and Belize, respectively. Under warm growth conditions, the two species showed different F 0 dynamics directly after freezing. The two Q. oleoides populations showed an initial rise in F 0 30 min after freezing, followed by a subsequent decrease, while the Q. virginiana populations showed a continuous decrease in F 0 after freezing. The North Carolina population of Q. virginiana showed a tendency toward deciduousness in response to winter temperatures, dropping 58% of its leaves over the three month winter period compared to only 6% in the tropical treatment. In contrast, the Florida population dropped 38% of its leaves during winter. The two populations of the tropical Q. oleoides showed no change in leaf drop during the 3-months winter (10% and 12%) relative to their leaf drop over the same timecourse in the tropical treatment. These results indicate important ecotypic differences in sensitivity to freezing and cold stress between the two populations of Q. virginiana as well as between the two species, corresponding to their climates of origin.
两种活栎(栎属绿栎组尼克松)的不同种群对寒冷和冰冻的敏感度因其原生气候的不同而存在差异。两个弗吉尼亚栎种群(分别源自北卡罗来纳州和佛罗里达州中北部)以及两个其近缘种油栎种群(分别源自伯利兹和哥斯达黎加)在模拟热带和温带条件的可控气候环境中生长。进行了三项实验,以测试这两个物种之间以及每个物种内两个种群之间在耐寒性和抗冻性方面的差异。在第一个实验中,通过检测在中等光照(400微摩尔·平方米⁻²·秒⁻¹)下短期暴露于三种温度(6℃、15℃和30℃)后,两种生长条件下植物的光系统II(PS II)光合产量(△F/F m')和非光化学猝灭(NPQ),来测试对寒冷的反应差异。在没有冷驯化(热带处理)的情况下,北卡罗来纳种群在低温(6℃)下表现出最高的光合产量。两个物种的两种生态型在其白天生长温度下(热带处理为30℃,温带处理为15℃)均表现出最大的△F/F m'和最小的NPQ。在植物被允许适应寒冷的温带处理下,弗吉尼亚栎种群在低温下的NPQ比油栎种群更大,这表明在更温带的物种中光保护能量耗散机制得到增强。在第二个和第三个实验中,通过检测过夜冷冻循环前后的暗适应F v/F m,来测试对冰冻的种间和种内差异。在没有冷驯化的情况下,两个物种的两个种群在冷冻后F v/F m的下降程度取决于最低冷冻温度(0℃、-2℃、-5℃或-10℃)。F v/F m最显著的下降发生在-10℃冷冻后,在冷冻后24小时测量。这些下降在该时间段内是持续且不可逆的。然而,代表弗吉尼亚栎北部分布范围界限的北卡罗来纳种群,其F v/F m的下降明显小于佛罗里达州中北部种群,而佛罗里达州中北部种群的F v/F m下降又低于来自伯利兹和哥斯达黎加的两个油栎种群。相反,在经历三个月的低温处理(温带处理)后,两个弗吉尼亚栎种群在-10℃冷冻后F v/F m没有下降,而两个油栎种群的F v/F m下降分别达到哥斯达黎加种群为0.2、伯利兹种群为0.1。在温暖的生长条件下,两种物种在冷冻后直接表现出不同的F 0动态。两个油栎种群在冷冻后30分钟F 0最初上升,随后下降,而弗吉尼亚栎种群在冷冻后F 0持续下降。弗吉尼亚栎的北卡罗来纳种群在冬季温度下有落叶的趋势,在三个月的冬季期间落叶58%,而在热带处理中仅为6%。相比之下,佛罗里达种群在冬季落叶38%。热带油栎的两个种群在三个月的冬季(10%和12%)期间的落叶量相对于热带处理中相同时间段内的落叶量没有变化。这些结果表明,弗吉尼亚栎的两个种群之间以及两个物种之间在对冰冻和寒冷胁迫的敏感度方面存在重要的生态型差异,这与它们的原生气候相对应。