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Strategies in the use of light energy by Genipa spruceana Steyerm seedlings subjected to flooding

In an attempt to elucidate strategies in the use of light energy by G. spruceana seedlings subjected to flooding, we investigated the capacity of light capture and use of light energy by G. spruceana in three growing conditions: 1- absence of flooding (SA), 2- partially flooded (PA) and 3- totally flooded (TA). Destructive and non-destructive measurements, such as specific leaf area, chloroplast pigment (chlorophyll and carotenoids) content and fluorescence analyses, were made at regular intervals over a period of 90 days. All parameters decreased in seedlings subjected to flooding. Plants of treatment TA dropped all of their leaves after 30 days of complete submergence. Chloroplast pigment content differed between treatments SA and TA after 30 days from the start of the experiment; whereas SA and PA plants only differed for this variable after 90 days. Plants subjected to flooding (PA and TA) exhibited high dissipation of photochemical de-excitation (DIo/ABS), indicating a limited efficiency of light energy use. This fact was proven by the performance index (PI ABS) only in analyses after 90 days, and no significant difference was verified for PI ABS among treatments up to 30 days. Therefore, considering that G. spruceana seedlings subjected to flooding reduced the chloroplast pigment content more quickly than PI ABS, we suggest that the light energetic flux in G. spruceana seedlings subjected to flooding, in the beginning, is more restricted to a decrease in the structures that captures light (reduction chlorophyll pigment content) than how the photosynthetic apparatus functions (alterations in photochemical efficiency of photosystem II).

Flooded plants; chlorophyll content; phenomenological fluxes; performance index


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