• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Effects of UV-B Radiation on Terrestrial Plants and Ecosystems: Interaction with CO₂ Enrichment
  • Beteiligte: Rozema, J.; Lenssen, G. M.; van de Staaij, J. W. M.; Tosserams, M.; Visser, A. J.; Broekman, R. A.
  • Erschienen: Kluwer Publishers, 1997
  • Erschienen in: Plant Ecology, 128 (1997) 1/2, Seite 182-191
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 1385-0237; 1573-5052
  • Schlagwörter: Interactions of UV-B with Environmental Factors
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  • Beschreibung: UV-B radiation is just one of the environmental factors, that affect plant growth. It is now widely accepted that realistic assessment of plant responses to enhanced UV-B should be performed at sufficiently high Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR), preferably under field conditions. This will often imply, that responses of plants to enhanced UV-B in the field will be assessed under simultaneous water shortage, nutrient deficiency and variation of temperature. Since atmospheric CO₂ enrichment, global warming and increasing UV-B radiation represent components of global climatic change, interactions of UV-B with CO₂ enrichment and temperature are particularly relevant. Only few relevant UV-B× CO₂ interaction studies have been published. Most of these studies refer to greenhouse experiments. We report a significant CO₂ × UV-B interaction for the total plant dry weight and root dry weight of the C₃-grass Elymus athericus. At elevated CO₂ (720 μmol$\text{mol}^{-1}$), plant growth was much less reduced by enhanced UV-B than at ambient atmospheric CO₂ although there were significant (positive) CO₂ effects and (negative) UV-B effects on plant growth. Most other CO₂ × UV-B studies do not report significant interactions on total plant biomass. This lack of CO₂ × UV-B interactions may result from the fact that primary metabolic targets for CO₂ and UVB are different. UV-B and CO₂ may differentially affect plant morphogenetic parameters: biomass allocation, branching, flowering, leaf thickness, emergence and senescence. Such more subtle interactions between CO₂ and UV-B need careful and long term experimentation to be detected. In the case of no significant CO₂ × UV-B interactions, combined CO₂ and UV-B effects will be additive. Plants differ in their response to CO₂ and UV-B, they respond in general positively to elevated CO₂ and negatively to enhanced UV-B. Moreover, plant species differ in their responsiveness to CO₂ and UV-B. Therefore, even in case of additive CO₂ and UV-B effects, plant competitive relationships may change markedly under current climatic change with simultaneous enhanced atmospheric CO₂ and solar UV-B radiation.