Field Katie J, Duckett Jeffrey G, Cameron Duncan D, Pressel Silvia
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK and Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK and Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK.
Ann Bot. 2015 May;115(6):915-22. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcv021. Epub 2015 Apr 8.
Following the consensus view for unitary origin and conserved function of stomata across over 400 million years of land plant evolution, stomatal abundance has been widely used to reconstruct palaeo-atmospheric environments. However, the responsiveness of stomata in mosses and hornworts, the most basal stomate lineages of extant land plants, has received relatively little attention. This study aimed to redress this imbalance and provide the first direct evidence of bryophyte stomatal responsiveness to atmospheric CO2.
A selection of hornwort (Anthoceros punctatus, Phaeoceros laevis) and moss (Polytrichum juniperinum, Mnium hornum, Funaria hygrometrica) sporophytes with contrasting stomatal morphologies were grown under different atmospheric CO2 concentrations ([CO2]) representing both modern (440 p.p.m. CO2) and ancient (1500 p.p.m. CO2) atmospheres. Upon sporophyte maturation, stomata from each bryophyte species were imaged, measured and quantified.
Densities and dimensions were unaffected by changes in [CO2], other than a slight increase in stomatal density in Funaria and abnormalities in Polytrichum stomata under elevated [CO2].
The changes to stomata in Funaria and Polytrichum are attributed to differential growth of the sporophytes rather than stomata-specific responses. The absence of responses to changes in [CO2] in bryophytes is in line with findings previously reported in other early lineages of vascular plants. These findings strengthen the hypothesis of an incremental acquisition of stomatal regulatory processes through land plant evolution and urge considerable caution in using stomatal densities as proxies for paleo-atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
基于气孔在超过4亿年的陆地植物进化过程中具有单一起源和保守功能这一共识观点,气孔丰度已被广泛用于重建古大气环境。然而,苔藓和角苔作为现存陆地植物中最基部的有气孔谱系,其气孔的响应性受到的关注相对较少。本研究旨在纠正这种不平衡,并提供苔藓植物气孔对大气二氧化碳响应性的首个直接证据。
选择了具有不同气孔形态的角苔(斑点角苔、平滑角苔)和苔藓(杜松多纹泥炭藓、角齿藓、立碗藓)的孢子体,在代表现代(440 ppm二氧化碳)和古代(1500 ppm二氧化碳)大气的不同大气二氧化碳浓度下培养。在孢子体成熟后,对每个苔藓物种的气孔进行成像、测量和量化。
除了在高二氧化碳浓度下立碗藓气孔密度略有增加以及多纹泥炭藓气孔出现异常外,气孔密度和尺寸不受二氧化碳浓度变化的影响。
立碗藓和多纹泥炭藓气孔的变化归因于孢子体的差异生长,而非气孔特异性反应。苔藓植物对二氧化碳浓度变化无反应这一结果与先前在其他早期维管植物谱系中报道的发现一致。这些发现强化了通过陆地植物进化逐步获得气孔调节过程的假说,并促使在将气孔密度用作古大气二氧化碳浓度的代理指标时要格外谨慎。