Monoterpene emissions from three Nothofagus species in Patagonia, Argentina

Isoprenoid emissions have key roles in plant biology and plant interactions with the environment. Global emission inventories of isoprenoid emissions still lack information from a large number species, especially from South American vegetation other than the rainforest ecosystem. A study was conduct...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Plant Interactions
Main Authors: Rita Baraldi, Francesca Rapparini, Francesco Loreto, Maria Eugenia Beget, Patricio Oricchio, Carlos Marcelo Di Bella, C. Rebella, Alejandra Kemerer, Mauro Centritto
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.openaccessrepository.it/record/97519
https://doi.org/10.1080/17429140701861735
Description
Summary:Isoprenoid emissions have key roles in plant biology and plant interactions with the environment. Global emission inventories of isoprenoid emissions still lack information from a large number species, especially from South American vegetation other than the rainforest ecosystem. A study was conducted to identify the basal emission of isoprenoid under field conditions from three Nothofagus species. The three Nothofagus species were characterized as strong monoterpene emitters while the emission of isoprene was undetectable. The two deciduous species, N. pumilio and N. antarctica, had similar photosynthetic parameters, but monoterpene emission rate and, consequently, the fraction of photosynthetic carbon re-emitted in the atmosphere as monoterpenes, were more than three-fold higher in N. pumilio than in N. Antarctica. The evergreen species N. dombeyi showed intermediate values of both monoterpene emission rate and fraction of photosynthetic carbon re-emitted. The monoterpene emission spectrum was very similar among the three Nothofagus species screened, but clearly different from the spectrum reported in other monoterpene-emitting species of the Fagaceae family. The importance of these findings for atmospheric chemistry and phylogenic evolution are discussed.