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Non-structural carbohydrates in plant organs can mirror the plant overall carbon supply status and balance and can also provide evidence for their health evaluation in the ecosystem. Non-structural carbohydrates in Kobresia pygmaea, one dominant herbaceous species on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, were measured to investigate altitudinal variation in non-structural carbohydrate accumulations, as well as engineering disturbance on the stability of the alpine grassland ecosystem. An increasing trend with elevation in total soluble sugars, fructose, and sucrose was detected in the K. pygmaea growing in both undisturbed and disturbed sites. However, there were higher amounts and a more distinctly altitudinal trend of non-structural carbohydrates with a minor fluctuation in undisturbed sites compared to disturbed sites. In addition, the altitudinal trend of sucrose is similar to that in sucrose phosphate synthase and sucrose synthase activities, while it is opposite to that in neutral invertase and soluble acid invertase activities, suggesting that the sucrose accumulation was primarily related to its synthesis. These results revealed that human disturbance resulted in a reduced carbon supply and altered the balance of carbohydrate utilization in plants on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.
Mosses are the pioneer and the first green land plants developed during the evolutionary process, they play an important role in the development of soil, biogeochemical cycling and facilitating plant colonization. Although species richness, composition, diversity and cover of moss communities vary, they grow well almost in all forests. Why mosses can grow in different conditions? What are the adaptive strategies of mosses in different forests along primary succession sequences? It is not still completely clear. In order to answer these questions, nutrient and carbohydrate accumulation in mosses were tested along the primary succession following deglaciation of Hailuogou glacier, Gongga Mountain, China. Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K) content, total organic carbon (TOC), soluble sugar and starch accumulated in the dominant moss species were determined and compared. TOC increased insignificantly with forest age. N, P, K contents in mosses were significantly higher in forests with dense shrubs, where N content was seperately 1.69% in A. hookeri and 1.35% in P. schreberi in 30 yr aged forest, P content in 30 yr and 52 yr aged forest was seperately 0.022% and 0.020% in A. hookeri and 0.020% and 0.017% in P. schreberi, and K content in 30 yr and 52 yr aged forest was seperately 0.570% and 0.553% in A. hookeri and 0.490% and 0.493% in P. schreberi. Soluble sugar was higher in the early stage of succession, but the opposite was observed for starch and nonstructure carbohydrate content, which was lower in early successional stage. Mosses adopted different adaptive strategies in different aged forests along receding glacier, in which starch and N, P, K contents were key for adaptiation. That is, mosses accumulated much more starch in the severe environment of early succession stage. In more favourable environment, N, P, K was found to be accumulated for plant growth.
At the end of July 1997 a premature shedding of one- and two-year-old foliage of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) was observed in central Poland. We examined the etiology and physiological consequences of this needle shedding event in a 15-year-old Scots pine plantation with diverse populations originating from Sweden, Russia, Latvia, Poland, Germany and France. On average, trees lost 20% of two-year-old foliage, with a local population from Poland having the highest needle loss (28%) and the lowest in a population from France (13%). However, differences among populations in needle loss were only marginally significant (p = 0.1). Phytopathological observations excluded biotic factors as responsible for needle loss. Analysis of thermal conditions in 1997 suggest that premature needle shedding may originate from the combination of winter physiological drought and unusually high (up to 35°C) air temperatures and low precipitation in late spring. We found that winter drought significantly affected the foliage by reducing its water content and concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates. High summer temperatures increased water stress and as a consequence led to reduction in crown density. Our data indicated that the needle shedding may be also related to root system damage due to low soil temperatures. Marginally significant differences among populations in needle shedding may indicate a weak genetic control over premature needle-fall among European Scots pine populations.
Concentrations of total nonstructural carbohydrates (TNC), soluble carbohydrates, starch, sucrose, glucose, fructose, raffinose, galactose, stachyose, mannitol and specific activities of soluble acid (AI) and neutral (NI) invertases, sucrose synthase (SuSy), hexokinase (HK), fructokinase (FK), glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) were analyzed in fine roots of Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh growing at a polluted site (near copper smelters) and a control site (free from heavy pollution). Also chemical properties of the soil from both sites were assessed. In comparison with the control, fine roots from the polluted site contained greater concentrations of TNC, soluble sugars, starch and sucrose but less hexoses, so they had higher values of sucrolysis index (sucrose/hexoses). The activity of AI, NI and SuSy declined insignificantly, while specific activities of HK, FK, GAPDH and G6PDH were significantly inhibited. The results suggest that a long-term heavy metal stress leads to an accumulation of carbohydrates and altering activities of glycolysis and the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in fine roots.
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