Leaf Wilting Movement Can Protect Water-Stressed Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) Plants Against Photoinhibition of Photosynthesis and Maintain Carbon Assimilation in the Field

Date

2010

Authors

Zhang, Ya-Li
Zhang, Hong-Zhi
Du, Ming -Wei
Li, Wei
Luo, Hong-Hai
Chow, Wah S (Fred)
Zhang, Wang-Feng

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Under severe water stress, leaf wilting is quite general in higher plants. This passive movement can reduce the energy load on a leaf. This paper reports an experimental test of the hypothesis that leaf wilting movement has a protective function that mitigates against photoinhibition of photosynthesis in the field. The experiments exposed cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) to two water regimes: water-stressed and well-watered. Leaf wilting movement occurred in water-stressed plants as the water potential decreased to -4. 1 MPa, reducing light interception but maintaining comparable quantum yields of photosystem II (PS II; Yield for short) and the proportion of total PS II centers that were open (qP). Predrawn Fv/Fm (potential quantum yield of PS II) as an indicator of overnight recovery of PS II from photoinhibition was higher than or similar to that in well-watered plants. Compared with water-stressed cotton leaves for which wilting movement was permitted, water-stressed cotton leaves restrained from such movement had significantly increased leaf temperature and instantaneous CO2 assimilation rates in the short term, but reduced Yield, qP, and Fv/Fm. In the long term, predrawn Fv/Fm and CO2 assimilation capacity were reduced in water-stressed leaves restrained from wilting movement. These results suggest that, under water stress, leaf wilting movement could reduce the incident light on leaves and their heat load, alleviate damage to the photosynthetic apparatus due to photoinhibition, and maintain considerable carbon assimilation capacity in the long term despite a partial loss of instantaneous carbon assimilation in the short term.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Embryophyta; Gossypium hirsutum Carbon assimilation; Chlorophyll fluorescence; Leaf wilting movement; Photoprotection; Water stress

Citation

Source

Journal of Plant Biology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31