GASEOUS CO2 EXCHANGE IN SILVER BIRCH SAPLINGS GROWING UNDER DIFFERENT LEVELS OF NITROGEN SUPPLY

A comparative assessment of gaseous CO 2 exchange in leaves of 5–6 years old saplings o f two forms of silver birch ( Betula pendula and Betula pendula var. сarelica ) and downy birch ( Betula pubescens Ehrh., 1789) growing under different levels of nitrogen nutrition was done. The study was carried...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the Karelian Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Main Authors: Viktor Bolondinskii, Lyudmila Vilikainen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Russian
Published: Karelian Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17076/eb885
https://doaj.org/article/dc513e119e2d44f1bf1561222ab7b525
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Summary:A comparative assessment of gaseous CO 2 exchange in leaves of 5–6 years old saplings o f two forms of silver birch ( Betula pendula and Betula pendula var. сarelica ) and downy birch ( Betula pubescens Ehrh., 1789) growing under different levels of nitrogen nutrition was done. The study was carried out in five plots (control sector, three sectors fertilized with different doses of NH 4 NO 3 , and a sector with NPK fertilization) at the Agrobiological Research Station of the Karelian Research Centre RAS located at the southern outskirts of Petrozavodsk. Both in the control sector (where the content of nitrogen was 0.23 ± 0.04 %) and in most of the fertilized sectors, there was no significant difference between the mean values of photosynthesis in B. pendula and B. pendula var. сarelica either for the entire PhAR range or for PhAR > 1400 μmol m- 2 с -1 . Nitrogen fertilization had a beneficial effect on the growth and the magnitude of gaseous CO 2 exchange of the studied objects. The calculated parameters of light response curves for net photosynthesis have shown an improved performance of the photosynthetic apparatus upon fertilization. Where PhAR values were low, its efficiency in Karelian birch was much higher compared with silver birch ( B. pendula ), and increased with the elevation of the nitrogen dosage. In the conditions of soil moisture shortage, there was no significant difference between chlorophyll content in leaves of fertilized and non-fertilized plants. The carotenoid content in the leaves of non-fertilized plants was 1.3–1.5‑fold that of fertilized plants. Even a small dose of nitrogen fertilizer (20 g per tree) had a favorable effect on the water content of leaves in a dry period. In the second year of fertilization, the midday depression of photosynthesis increased considerably, especially in the sectors with high doses of nitrogen fertilizer. In the control sector, the decrease in photosynthesis in the absence of air drought and with sufficient soil moisture content was 20–25 %, and in ...