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Acta Agron Sin ›› 2008, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (10): 1805-1811.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1006.2008.01805

• TILLAGE & CULTIVATION·PHYSIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Photosynthetic Characteristics and Photoprotective Mechanisms in Highland Barley

CHENG Ming12,LI Zhi-Qiang3,JIANG Chuang-Dao1*,SHI Lei1,TANG Yu-Dan1,ZHANG Jin-Zheng1   

  1. 1 Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093; 2 Graduate School of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049; 3 Beijing Vocational College of Agriculture, Beijing 102442, China
  • Received:2008-01-20 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2008-10-12 Published:2008-10-12
  • Contact: JIANG Chuang-Dao

Abstract: As a local crop of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, highland barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) has acclimated to the typical habitat with strong light and low O2 to CO2 ratio. Low O2 to CO2 ratio may have a great influence on photorespiration which plays an important role in protecting photosynthetic apparatus against photoinhibition. In this study, we hope to know whether photorespiration plays an important role in photoprotection of highland barley and what are the main photoprotective mechanisms of highland barley. Gas exchange, fluorescence quenching kinetics and reflectance spectrum were investigated to explore the photosynthetic characteristic and allocation of excitated energy in two highland barley cultivars. Results showed that light saturation point of highland barley was about 1 000 μmol m-2 s-1. Photorespiration rate (Pr) increased with light intensity increasing while it did not change significantly above 500 mmol m-2 s-1. The percentage of photorespiration to total photosynthesis (Pr/Pm) declined gradually with the increase of light intensity. The efficiency of open centers of photosystem II (Fv’/Fm’), actual photosystem II efficiency (ΦPSII) and photochemical quenching (qP) all declined with the increase of light intensity; non-photochemical quenching increased with light intensity increasing, indicating that more and more excited energy dissipated as thermal dissipation. Spectrum analysis showed that the change of photochemical reflectance index (△PRI) increased significantly when fully dark-adapted plants were suddenly exposed to light. On these bases, we concluded that photorespiration is not the main pathway for highland barley to relieve strong light stress; thermal dissipation relying on xanthophyll cycle may play an important role in dissipating excessive excited energy in highland barley.

Key words: Highland barley, Strong light, Photorespiration, Thermal dissipation

[1] HE Tao,JIA Jing-Fen. Cloning and Function Analysis of hbltl4.2 Gene in Highland Barley(Hordeum vulgare L. var. nudum Hook. f.) [J]. Acta Agron Sin, 2009, 35(2): 295-300.
[2] FU Da-Xiong;RUAN Ren-Wu;DAI Xiu-Mei;LIU Yong-Mei. A Study on Ancient Barley, Wheat and Millet Discovered at Changguo of Tibet [J]. Acta Agron Sin, 2000, 26(04): 392-398.
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