Article,

Date palm responses to a chronic, realistic ozone exposure in a FACE experiment

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Environmental Research, (2021)Rm0bz Times Cited:11 Cited References Count:89.
DOI: ARTN 110868 10.1016/j.envres.2021.110868

Abstract

Date palms are highly economically important species in hot arid regions, which may suffer ozone (O-3) pollution equivalently to heat and water stress. However, little is known about date palm sensitivity to O-3. Therefore, to identify their resistance mechanisms against elevated O-3, physiological parameters (leaf gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf pigments) and biomass growth responses to realistic O-3 exposure were tested in an isoprene-emitting date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L. cv. Nabut Saif) by a Free-Air Controlled Exposure (FACE) facility with three levels of O-3 (ambient AA, 45 ppb as 24-h average, 1.5 x AA and 2 x AA). We found a reduction of photosynthesis only at 2 x AA although some foliar traits known as early indicators of O-3 stress responded already at 1.5 x AA, such as increased dark respiration, reduced leaf pigment content, reduced maximum quantum yield of PSII, inactivation of the oxygen evolving complex of PSII and reduced performance index PITOT. As a result, O-3 did not affect most of the growth parameters although significant declines of root biomass occurred only at 2 x AA. The major mechanism in date palm for reducing the severity of O-3 impacts was a restriction of stomatal O-3 uptake due to low stomatal conductance and O-3-induced stomatal closure. In addition, an increased respiration in elevated O-3 may indicate an enhanced capacity of catabolizing metabolites for detoxification and repair. Interestingly, date palm produced low amounts of monoterpenes, whose emission was stimulated in 2 x AA, although isoprene emission declined at both 1.5 and 2 x AA. Our results warrant more research on a biological significance of terpenoids in plant resistance against O-3 stress.

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