Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China

Winter photosynthesis of trees is well studied for boreal, Mediterranean, and some temperate forests, while little is known about the forests from tropical-subtropical transition zones and subtropical areas. Evergreen broadleaf trees dominate the forests from elevation 1,000 to 2,600 m in the subtro...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Y., Cao, K., Goldstein, G.
Formato: SER
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19956819_v_n_p812_Zhang
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spelling todo:paper_19956819_v_n_p812_Zhang2023-10-03T16:37:34Z Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China Zhang, Y. Cao, K. Goldstein, G. Carbon budget Evergreen broadleaf forests Water deficits PSI and PSII Winter carbon assimilation Winter photosynthesis of trees is well studied for boreal, Mediterranean, and some temperate forests, while little is known about the forests from tropical-subtropical transition zones and subtropical areas. Evergreen broadleaf trees dominate the forests from elevation 1,000 to 2,600 m in the subtropical area of SW China, while forests in the subtropical area of SE China with similar elevations are dominated by deciduous broadleaf trees. In order to understand the winter photosynthetic performances of evergreen broadleaf trees in subtropical areas, seasonal dynamics in photosynthesis of 10 evergreen broadleaf tree species from a montane cloud forest in SW China was studied. Plant water relations and low temperature effects on photosynthetic system I and II were also studied. Although all 10 species down regulated maximum photosynthetic rate by 13% to 53% in winter, they maintained considerably high winter carbon assimilation (5.4 to 8.8 μmol m−2 s−1) during this period. Trees did not experience water deficits in the winter/dry season, and were able to tolerate the coldest winter season in history. The considerably high winter carbon assimilation of evergreen broadleaf trees in this area may help them to establish dominance and allow these forests to sequestrate carbon during the unfavorable season. © Zhejiang University Press, Hangzhou and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013. SER info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19956819_v_n_p812_Zhang
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Carbon budget
Evergreen broadleaf forests
Water deficits PSI and PSII
Winter carbon assimilation
spellingShingle Carbon budget
Evergreen broadleaf forests
Water deficits PSI and PSII
Winter carbon assimilation
Zhang, Y.
Cao, K.
Goldstein, G.
Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
topic_facet Carbon budget
Evergreen broadleaf forests
Water deficits PSI and PSII
Winter carbon assimilation
description Winter photosynthesis of trees is well studied for boreal, Mediterranean, and some temperate forests, while little is known about the forests from tropical-subtropical transition zones and subtropical areas. Evergreen broadleaf trees dominate the forests from elevation 1,000 to 2,600 m in the subtropical area of SW China, while forests in the subtropical area of SE China with similar elevations are dominated by deciduous broadleaf trees. In order to understand the winter photosynthetic performances of evergreen broadleaf trees in subtropical areas, seasonal dynamics in photosynthesis of 10 evergreen broadleaf tree species from a montane cloud forest in SW China was studied. Plant water relations and low temperature effects on photosynthetic system I and II were also studied. Although all 10 species down regulated maximum photosynthetic rate by 13% to 53% in winter, they maintained considerably high winter carbon assimilation (5.4 to 8.8 μmol m−2 s−1) during this period. Trees did not experience water deficits in the winter/dry season, and were able to tolerate the coldest winter season in history. The considerably high winter carbon assimilation of evergreen broadleaf trees in this area may help them to establish dominance and allow these forests to sequestrate carbon during the unfavorable season. © Zhejiang University Press, Hangzhou and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013.
format SER
author Zhang, Y.
Cao, K.
Goldstein, G.
author_facet Zhang, Y.
Cao, K.
Goldstein, G.
author_sort Zhang, Y.
title Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
title_short Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
title_full Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
title_fullStr Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
title_full_unstemmed Winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical China
title_sort winter photosynthesis of evergreen broadleaf trees from a montane cloud forest in subtropical china
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19956819_v_n_p812_Zhang
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangy winterphotosynthesisofevergreenbroadleaftreesfromamontanecloudforestinsubtropicalchina
AT caok winterphotosynthesisofevergreenbroadleaftreesfromamontanecloudforestinsubtropicalchina
AT goldsteing winterphotosynthesisofevergreenbroadleaftreesfromamontanecloudforestinsubtropicalchina
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