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Nitrogen allocation and carbon isotope fractionation in relation to intercepted radiation and position in a young Pinus radiata D. don tree

TLDR
In this paper, the three dimensional distribution of intercepted radiation, intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) and late summer needle nitrogen (N) concentration were determined at the tips of all 54 branches in a 6·2m-tall Pinus radiata D. Don tree growing in a New Zealand plantation.
Abstract
The three dimensional distribution of intercepted radiation, intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) and late summer needle nitrogen (N) concentration were determined at the tips of all 54 branches in a 6·2-m-tall Pinus radiata D. Don tree growing in a New Zealand plantation. Measurements included above- and below-canopy irradiance, leaf stable carbon isotopic composition (δ13C) and tree canopy architecture. The radiation absorption component of the model, MAESTRO, was tested on site and then used to determine the branch tip distribution of intercepted radiation. We hypothesized that in branch tip needles: (i) the allocation of nitrogen and other nutrients would be closely associated with the distribution of intercepted radiation, reflecting carbon gain optimization theory, and (ii) Ci would predominantly reflect changes in photosynthetic rate (A) rather than stomatal conductance (gs), indicating that the increase in A for a given increase in N concentration was larger than the corresponding increase in gs. Needle nitrogen concentration was poorly related to intercepted radiation, regardless of the period over which the latter was calculated. At a given height, there was a large azimuthal variation in intercepted radiation but N concentration was remarkably uniform around the tree canopy. There was, however, a linear and positive correspondence between N concentration and δ13C and needle height above ground (r2 = 0·73 and 0·68, respectively). The very strong linear correspondence between N concentration and Ci (r2 = 0·71) was interpreted, using gas exchange measurements, as supporting our second hypothesis. Recognizing the strong apical control in P. radiata and possible effects of leaf nitrogen storage in an evergreen species, we propose that the tree leader must have constituted a very strong carbon sink throughout the growing season, and that the proximity of branch tip needles to the leader affected their photosynthetic capacity and nutrient concentration, independent of intercepted radiation. This implies an integrated internal determination of resource allocation within the tree and challenges the current convention that resources are optimally distributed according to the profile of intercepted radiation.

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Citations
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An investigation of hydraulic limitation and compensation in large, old Douglas-fir trees.

TL;DR: The formal hydraulic limitation hypothesis was not supported and without the observed increases in the soil-to-leaf water potential differential (DeltaPsi) and decreases in the leaf area/sapwood area ratio, kl would have been reduced by more than 70% in the 60-m trees compared with the 15-m Trees, instead of the observed decrease of 44%.
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Foliage physiology and biochemistry in response to light gradients in conifers with varying shade tolerance.

TL;DR: There was no evidence that the actual allocation pattern was optimized on the basis of PPFD gradients alone; simulated net carbon assimilation increased still further when even more N and C were allocated to high-light environments at the canopy top.
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Spatial and temporal variation in respiration in a young ponderosa pine forest during a summer drought

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employed a combination of biological and micrometeorological measurements to assess carbon respiratory fluxes at the soil surface, within and above a 4m-tall ponderosa pine forest.
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Carbon isotope discrimination and growth response of old Pinus ponderosa trees to stand density reductions

TL;DR: Photosynthetic capacity, as indexed by foliar nitrogen ([N]) and by the relationship between photosynthesis and internal CO 2 curves, was unchanged by thinning, confirming the suspicion that the decline in A / g was due to a relatively greater increase in g in comparison with A .
Journal ArticleDOI

Increased cytokinin levels in transgenic PSAG12–IPT tobacco plants have large direct and indirect effects on leaf senescence, photosynthesis and N partitioning

TL;DR: Interactions between cytokinin metabolism, Rubisco and protein levels, photosynthesis and plant nitrogen partitioning were studied in transgenic tobacco plants showing delayed leaf senescence through a novel type of enhanced cytokinIn synthesis, targeted to senescing leaves and negatively auto-regulated (PSAG12‐IPT), thus preventing developmental abnormalities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon Isotope Discrimination and Photosynthesis

TL;DR: In this article, the physical and enzymatic bases of carbone isotope discrimination during photosynthesis were discussed, noting how knowledge of discrimination can be used to provide additional insight into photosynthetic metabolism and the environmental influences on that process.
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On the Relationship Between Carbon Isotope Discrimination and the Intercellular Carbon Dioxide Concentration in Leaves

TL;DR: It is shown how diffusion of gaseous COz can significantly affect carbon isotopic discrimination and a simple relationship between discrimination and the ratio of the intercellular and atmospheric partial pressures of COZ is developed.
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Photosynthesis and nitrogen relationships in leaves of C3 plants.

TL;DR: Surviving in certain environments clearly does not require maximising photosynthetic capacity for a given leaf nitrogen content, as variation reflects different strategies of nitrogen partitioning, the electron transport capacity per unit of chlorophyll and the specific activity of RuBP carboxylase.
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A wet oxidation procedure suitable for the determination of nitrogen and mineral nutrients in biological material

TL;DR: In this paper, a mixture of sulphuric acid and hydrogen peroxide with the addition of lithium sulphate to elevate the digestion temperature and selenium as catalyst is described, which is suitable for the determination of nitrogen, phosphorus and most mineral ions.
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Plant Responses to Multiple Environmental FactorsPhysiological ecology provides tools for studying how interacting environmental resources control plant growth

TL;DR: Plant growth in diverse environments requires a similar balance of resources-energy, water, and mineral nutrients-to maintain optimal growth, but these resources differ by at least two orders of magnitude in the availability.
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