Dubey Garima, Phillips Aaron L, Kemp Darrell J, Atwell Brian J
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Food Science, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Ann Bot. 2025 Feb 19;135(3):577-588. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcae098.
Five species of cotton (Gossypium) were exposed to 38 °C days during early vegetative development. Commercial cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) was contrasted with four wild cotton species (Gossypium australe, G. bickii, G. robinsonii and G. sturtianum) that are endemic to central and northern Australia.
Plants were grown at daytime maxima of 30 or 38 °C for 25 days, commencing at the four-leaf stage. Leaf areas and shoot biomass were used to calculate relative rates of growth and specific leaf areas. Leaf gas exchange measurements revealed assimilation and transpiration rates, in addition to electron transport rates and carboxylation efficiency in steady-state conditions. Finally, leaf morphological traits (mean leaf area and leaf shape) were quantified, along with leaf surface decorations, imaged using scanning electron microscopy.
Shoot morphology was differentially affected by heat, with three of the four wild species growing faster at 38 than at 30 °C, whereas early growth in G. hirsutum was severely inhibited by heat. Areas of individual leaves and the number of leaves both contributed to these contrasting growth responses, with fewer, smaller leaves at 38 °C in G. hirsutum. CO2 assimilation and transpiration rates of G. hirsutum were also dramatically reduced by heat. Cultivated cotton failed to achieve evaporative cooling, contrasting with the transpiration-driven cooling in the wild species. Heat substantially reduced electron transport rates and carboxylation efficiency in G. hirsutum, with much smaller effects in the wild species. We speculate that leaf shape, as assessed by invaginations of leaf margins, and leaf size contributed to heat dispersal differentially among the five species. Likewise, reflectance of light radiation was also highly distinctive for each species.
These four wild Australian relatives of cotton have adapted to hot days that are inhibitory to commercial cotton, deploying a range of physiological and structural adaptations to achieve accelerated growth at 38 °C.
在营养生长早期,将5种棉花(棉属)置于38°C的日间环境中。将商业棉花品种(陆地棉)与4种澳大利亚中部和北部特有的野生棉花品种(南方棉、比克氏棉、罗宾逊氏棉和斯特蒂棉)进行对比。
从四叶期开始,将植株在日间最高温度为30或38°C的环境中培养25天。利用叶面积和地上部生物量计算相对生长速率和比叶面积。叶气体交换测量揭示了同化率和蒸腾速率,以及稳态条件下的电子传递速率和羧化效率。最后,对叶形态特征(平均叶面积和叶形)进行量化,并利用扫描电子显微镜成像观察叶表面纹饰。
地上部形态受高温的影响存在差异,4种野生品种中有3种在38°C时比在30°C时生长更快,而陆地棉的早期生长受到高温的严重抑制。单叶面积和叶片数量均导致了这些不同的生长反应,陆地棉在38°C时叶片数量减少、叶片变小。高温还显著降低了陆地棉的二氧化碳同化率和蒸腾速率。与野生品种中由蒸腾作用驱动的降温不同,栽培棉花无法实现蒸发降温。高温大幅降低了陆地棉的电子传递速率和羧化效率,而对野生品种的影响较小。我们推测,通过叶缘内陷评估的叶形和叶大小在5个品种中对热量扩散的贡献有所不同。同样,每个品种对光辐射的反射率也有很大差异。
棉花的这4种澳大利亚野生近缘种已经适应了对商业棉花有抑制作用的高温天气,通过一系列生理和结构适应在38°C时实现了加速生长。