A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC

In recent decades the Arctic has been warming at a rate of almost twice the global average and this has led to changes in the composition, density, and distribution of arctic vegetation. These changes will have strong influences on the region’s net carbon (C) exchange between land and atmosphere and...

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Main Author: Vasquez, Ethan
Other Authors: Bender, Michael, Gauthier, Paul
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016395w953s
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spelling ftprincetonuniv:oai:dataspace.princeton.edu:88435/dsp016395w953s 2023-05-15T14:37:40+02:00 A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC Vasquez, Ethan Bender, Michael Gauthier, Paul 2016-05-02 63 pages http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016395w953s en_US eng http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016395w953s Princeton University Senior Theses 2016 ftprincetonuniv 2022-04-10T20:58:32Z In recent decades the Arctic has been warming at a rate of almost twice the global average and this has led to changes in the composition, density, and distribution of arctic vegetation. These changes will have strong influences on the region’s net carbon (C) exchange between land and atmosphere and hold significant implications for future atmospheric [CO2]. However, the precise nature of arctic vegetation change under future warming is not well constrained, highlighting the need for a better understanding of how arctic plants will respond to climate change. In this study, we investigated four key plant mechanisms in Betula pubescens ssp. tortusa: 1) Gross photosynthesis (GOP), 2) Respiration, 3) Rubisco carboxylation (Vc) and oxygenation (Vo), and 4) Mesophyll conductance (gm). Experiments were conducted under varying light intensity and [O2]. For the analysis we utilized a novel method for measuring leaf photosynthesis and respiration that relies on 18O-labelled water, which to the best of our knowledge has never been applied to terrestrial plants, and the measurements collected have not been conducted in this arctic species before. GOP was measured at 10.84 ± 2.11 μmol m-2 s-1 and Vc /Vo was approximately 0.5 for all examined lightintensities. For all [O2] we found that respiration in the light (RLight) was lower than dark respiration (RDark), indicating that respiration is inhibited in the light. The response of gm was shown to increase with increasing light intensity and decrease with decreasing [O2]. Measurements collected agreed with both previous studies and theoretical approximations, which demonstrates that this O2 method is a reliable method of measurement for a wide range of leaf processes. This study is a great development in our understanding of arctic plants, and the unique responses identified in Betula pubescens ssp. tortusa underscore the importance of expanding these measurements to characterize other arctic species. Bachelor Thesis Arctic Climate change DataSpace at Princeton University Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataSpace at Princeton University
op_collection_id ftprincetonuniv
language English
description In recent decades the Arctic has been warming at a rate of almost twice the global average and this has led to changes in the composition, density, and distribution of arctic vegetation. These changes will have strong influences on the region’s net carbon (C) exchange between land and atmosphere and hold significant implications for future atmospheric [CO2]. However, the precise nature of arctic vegetation change under future warming is not well constrained, highlighting the need for a better understanding of how arctic plants will respond to climate change. In this study, we investigated four key plant mechanisms in Betula pubescens ssp. tortusa: 1) Gross photosynthesis (GOP), 2) Respiration, 3) Rubisco carboxylation (Vc) and oxygenation (Vo), and 4) Mesophyll conductance (gm). Experiments were conducted under varying light intensity and [O2]. For the analysis we utilized a novel method for measuring leaf photosynthesis and respiration that relies on 18O-labelled water, which to the best of our knowledge has never been applied to terrestrial plants, and the measurements collected have not been conducted in this arctic species before. GOP was measured at 10.84 ± 2.11 μmol m-2 s-1 and Vc /Vo was approximately 0.5 for all examined lightintensities. For all [O2] we found that respiration in the light (RLight) was lower than dark respiration (RDark), indicating that respiration is inhibited in the light. The response of gm was shown to increase with increasing light intensity and decrease with decreasing [O2]. Measurements collected agreed with both previous studies and theoretical approximations, which demonstrates that this O2 method is a reliable method of measurement for a wide range of leaf processes. This study is a great development in our understanding of arctic plants, and the unique responses identified in Betula pubescens ssp. tortusa underscore the importance of expanding these measurements to characterize other arctic species.
author2 Bender, Michael
Gauthier, Paul
format Bachelor Thesis
author Vasquez, Ethan
spellingShingle Vasquez, Ethan
A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
author_facet Vasquez, Ethan
author_sort Vasquez, Ethan
title A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
title_short A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
title_full A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
title_fullStr A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
title_full_unstemmed A PHYSIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO DETERMINING ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY IN THE ARCTIC
title_sort physiological approach to determining ecosystem productivity in the arctic
publishDate 2016
url http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016395w953s
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_relation http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016395w953s
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