Zusammenfassung
The photosynthetic capacity of frost-hardy and frost-sensitive needles of 3-year-old Scots pines and the allocation and utilization of assimilated carbon was examined during winter and early spring. The photosynthates of the whole trees were labelled by 14CO2 fixation and after chase periods of from 7 days to 4 months under natural climatic conditions, the distribution of radiocarbon in the various tissues of the trees was determined. During winter maximal photosynthetic rates of 1-year-old needles were considerably lower than in summer when calculated on a leaf area basis. However, when related to the chlorophyll content these discrepancies disappeared. The decrease of the photosynthetic capacity upon frost-hardening could be attributed to a two- to three-fold reduction in the chlorophyll content of the needles. The pulse-chase experiments showed that photosynthesis during the cold season preferentially provides substrates for respiration. Half of the assimilated 14C was respired during the first week, and after chase periods of 3 – 4 months the trees contained not more than 10 – 20% of the radiocarbon. The carbon, which was exported by the needles, was translocated basipetally via the twigs and the stem to the roots. Whereas in the axial system incorporation of radiocarbon into storage compounds, like starch, and into cell wall material was almost negligible during the cold season, in the roots one-third of the radiocarbon was recovered from starch 2 months after the 14C-pulse. In contrast to the above-ground parts of the trees, where starch content was very low during winter, in the roots considerable amounts of starch, up to 450 μmol hexose units · g– 1 DW, were found even during mid-winter. In early spring the radiocarbon in the cell wall-, lipid-, and starch-fraction accounted for more than 80% of the 14C recovered at that time from the axial system. Incorporation of minor quantities into the cell wall fraction of the roots during winter and early spring indicate continuous root growth during the cold period as well as in early spring. Whereas during winter the buds did not attract freshly assimilated carbon, in spring just before bud break substantial amounts of carbon were translocated from the needles into the buds. In contrast, remobilization of carbon, which had been assimilated during autumn of the previous year, and import into the sprouting buds could not be demonstrated.
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