1. Effects of Mediterranean summer conditions on chlorophyll <italic>a</italic> fluorescence emission in the epiphytic lichen <italic>Flavoparmelia soredians</italic>: a field study.
- Author
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Tretiach, M., Baruffo, L., and Piccotto, M.
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CHLOROPHYLL spectra , *EPIPHYTIC lichens , *CORK oak , *PHOTOSYSTEMS , *FIELD research , *CHLOROPHYLL in water - Abstract
Recent hypotheses suppose that dry lichens emit a faint chlorophyll
a fluorescence because of a “long-wavelength quencher” embedded in the antenna complex that protects photosystem II (PSII) from photodamage. To verify in the field the PSII re-activation promptness induced by water availability, chlorophylla fluorescence was measured on the epiphytic lichenFlavoparmelia soredians after two months without rainfall events in a Mediterranean cork oak wood (Bosco Santo Pietro, Sicily, Italy). Measurements were carried out at dawn and sunset on north- and south-exposed populations under different regimes of hydration and dark-adaptation. The results show that prolonged hydration increases the photochemical conveying of energy to PSII and decreases the non-photochemical energy dissipation that otherwise might occur in the antenna complex of the lichen photobionts. A slight decrease in PSII efficiency caused by photoinhibition was observed in thalli exposed to ambient light (up to 600 μmol photons m−2 s-1) only when kept fully hydrated. The results are discussed on the basis of our knowledge on the ecology of the species, that is a representative component of Mediterranean epiphytic lichen communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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