Ecology. Michael Begon

Ecology - Michael  Begon


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of CO2 concentration over a number of days (different in each case) in three lakes in Estonia, as indicated. Note that the colour‐coding varies between the lakes to reflect their different concentration ranges, and that their depths are different.

      Source: After Laas et al. (2016).

Bar charts depict aquatic plants may be limited in their photosynthetic ability by the availability of CO2. (a) The relative growth rate (RGR, rate of growth per unit weight) for 10 species of aquatic plants, as indicated, when water was at equilibrium with the surrounding air with respect to CO2 (low-C) such that the contribution of CO2 to dissolved inorganic carbon was relatively small, and when CO2 was continually passed into the water (high-C) such that the contribution of CO2 was large.

      Source: After Hussner et al. (2016).

      3.4.1 C3, C4 and CAM

      the C3 pathway

      In the C3 pathway, the Calvin–Benson cycle, CO2 is fixed, through combination with ribulose 1,5‐biphosphate (RuBP), into a three‐carbon acid (phosphoglyceric acid) by the enzyme RuBisCO (ribulose‐1,5‐biphosphate carboxylase‐oxygenase), which is present in massive amounts in the leaves (25–30% of the total leaf nitrogen). This same enzyme can also act as an oxygenase, as its name indicates, and this activity (photorespiration) can result in a wasteful release of CO2 – reducing by about one‐third the net amounts of CO2 that are fixed. Photorespiration increases with temperature with the consequence that the overall efficiency of carbon fixation declines with increasing temperature.

      The rate of photosynthesis of C3 plants increases with the intensity of radiation, but reaches a plateau. In many species, particularly shade species, this plateau occurs at radiation intensities far below that of full solar radiation (see Figure 3.4). Plants with C3 metabolism have low water‐use efficiency compared with C4 and CAM plants (see later), mainly because in a C3 plant, CO2 diffuses rather slowly into the leaf and so allows time for a lot of water vapour to diffuse out of it through the open stomata.

      The rate of photosynthesis of C3 plants also increases with the concentration of CO2 within the plant, and because of the slow rate of diffusion, with the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere (see later). However, this rate is limited by the ability of C3 plants to regenerate RuBP with which CO2 can be combined, and therefore levels off as CO2 concentrations increase.

      the C4 pathway

      In the C4 pathway, the Hatch–Slack cycle, the C3 pathway is present but it is confined to cells deep in the body of the leaf. CO2 that diffuses into the leaves via the stomata meets mesophyll cells containing the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase. This enzyme combines atmospheric CO2 with PEP to produce a four‐carbon acid. This diffuses, and releases CO2 to the inner cells where it enters the traditional C3 pathway. PEP carboxylase has a much greater affinity than RuBisCO for CO2. There are profound consequences.


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