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Morning Temperature (morning + temperature)
Selected AbstractsTEMPERATURE INDUCED PHOTOINHIBITION IN OUTDOOR CULTURES OF MONODUS SUBTERRANEUSJOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 2000A. Vonshak Outdoor algal cultures are continuously exposed to changes in environmental conditions, particularly irradiance and temperature. While the changes in light intensity take place in a range of one to two hours, the increase in temperature is a slower process and takes about four to five hours. This de-synchronization between the two important environmental factors governing photosynthesis and growth of algae results in a unique stress condition where photoinhibition can be induced at relatively low light intensity. Outdoors the early morning culture temperature was found to be about 12 to 14° C, and reaches 25 to 28° C at mid-day. In an experiment, such a natural temperature regime was compared to another one in which the morning temperature of the culture was increased to 20° C by using a heating system. A fast decline in the maximal photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) was observed starting as soon as sunrise. The decline was faster in the non-heated culture and was to a lower value. The diurnal changes in the electron transfer rate (ETR) and in the non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of the cultures, indicated that the early morning exposure of cells to sub-optimal temperature results in a fast inactivation of PSII activity which was reflected in an inhibition of the photosynthetic activity even when the two cultures finally reached the same temperature at mid-day. Thus, under the same light and temperature mid-day conditions the ETR was higher and the NPQ was significantly lower in the heated culture. Significant changes in productivity of the cultures also were observed. [source] Sub-optimal morning temperature induces photoinhibition in dense outdoor cultures of the alga Monodus subterraneus (Eustigmatophyta)PLANT CELL & ENVIRONMENT, Issue 10 2001A. Vonshak Abstract Diel changes in photosynthetic oxygen evolution and several photochemical parameters measured by chlorophyll fluorescence quenching and induction were measured in outdoor dense cultures of the alga Monodus subterraneus (Eustigmatophyta). Cultures were maintained under two temperature regimes. In one, a rise in temperature was initiated in the morning by the increase in solar radiation up to the optimal temperature of 28 °C; in the other, a heating device was used to increase the rate of warming up in early morning. Although the two cultures were maintained at the same temperature and light intensity for most of the day, cultures exposed for only a short time to suboptimal morning temperature showed a larger decrease in almost all the photosynthetic parameters. By comparing the diel changes in maximal photochemistry efficiency of photosystem II, the electron transport rate and the photochemical and non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching of the cultures, we concluded that even a relatively short exposure to suboptimal morning temperatures induced photoinhibitory damage. The higher photochemical activity of the heated culture was also reflected in a significant increase in productivity, which was 60% higher in the morning heated cultures than in the non-heated cultures. [source] |