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Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations

This study was undertaken to investigate the potential effects of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (C02) concentrations on southern African C4 grass species, with respect to carbon assimilation and allocation, growth, and morphological development. Altered CO2-responsiveness with simultaneous expos...

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Main Author: Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
Other Authors: Stock, William
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
author2 Stock, William
author_browse Stock, William
Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
author_facet Stock, William
Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
author_sort Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
collection Thesis
description This study was undertaken to investigate the potential effects of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (C02) concentrations on southern African C4 grass species, with respect to carbon assimilation and allocation, growth, and morphological development. Altered CO2-responsiveness with simultaneous exposure to other environmental influences was also assessed in order to estimate the impacts of elevated CO2 on the future distribution and productivity of grasslands in southern Africa. The initial hypothesis was based on established theory and current perceptions, which predict no significant photosynthetic or growth responses to elevated CO2 in C4 grasses. Three different approaches were employed to test a range of questions: ., A quantitative literature review (meta-analysis) was undertaken of physiological and growth responses to elevated CO2 of wild C3 and C4 grass species worldwide, in order to test the current perception of non-responsiveness in C4 species . ., Selected representative southern African C4 grass species were grown from seed or from small tufts for periods of at least four months in open-top chambers in a greenhouse under either ambient (360 Ilmol mor1 ) or elevated (650-700 Ilmol mor1 ) CO2 concentration. Both inter- and intra-specific variability in the CO2-response were studied, under different seasonal temperature regimes. The CO2 treatments were also combined with defoliation and increased ultraviolet-B (UV -B) radiation treatments, and comparisons were made with the CO2- responsiveness of woody grassland invaders, in order to examine the potentially moderating influence of other climatic and biological factors on C4 responses. • Photosynthetic responses to elevated CO2 of selected C4 and C3 grass species were determined under natural conditions in a field experiment situated in a C4-dominated grassland in KwazululNatal. Potential seasonal shifts in CO2-responsiveness were investigated over the course of a year, to determine possible linkages with plant phenology.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:06.010Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40262 Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African C₄ grass species to increases in atmospheric CO₂ concentrations Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha Stock, William Botany This study was undertaken to investigate the potential effects of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (C02) concentrations on southern African C4 grass species, with respect to carbon assimilation and allocation, growth, and morphological development. Altered CO2-responsiveness with simultaneous exposure to other environmental influences was also assessed in order to estimate the impacts of elevated CO2 on the future distribution and productivity of grasslands in southern Africa. The initial hypothesis was based on established theory and current perceptions, which predict no significant photosynthetic or growth responses to elevated CO2 in C4 grasses. Three different approaches were employed to test a range of questions: ., A quantitative literature review (meta-analysis) was undertaken of physiological and growth responses to elevated CO2 of wild C3 and C4 grass species worldwide, in order to test the current perception of non-responsiveness in C4 species . ., Selected representative southern African C4 grass species were grown from seed or from small tufts for periods of at least four months in open-top chambers in a greenhouse under either ambient (360 Ilmol mor1 ) or elevated (650-700 Ilmol mor1 ) CO2 concentration. Both inter- and intra-specific variability in the CO2-response were studied, under different seasonal temperature regimes. The CO2 treatments were also combined with defoliation and increased ultraviolet-B (UV -B) radiation treatments, and comparisons were made with the CO2- responsiveness of woody grassland invaders, in order to examine the potentially moderating influence of other climatic and biological factors on C4 responses. • Photosynthetic responses to elevated CO2 of selected C4 and C3 grass species were determined under natural conditions in a field experiment situated in a C4-dominated grassland in KwazululNatal. Potential seasonal shifts in CO2-responsiveness were investigated over the course of a year, to determine possible linkages with plant phenology. 2024-07-04T13:36:26Z 2024-07-04T13:36:26Z 1999 2024-07-04T12:41:50Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40262 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Botany
Wand, Stephanie Juliane Editha
Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
title_full Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
title_fullStr Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
title_full_unstemmed Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
title_short Ecophysiological responses of Themeda triandra Forsk. and other Southern African Câ‚„ grass species to increases in atmospheric COâ‚‚ concentrations
title_sort ecophysiological responses of themeda triandra forsk and other southern african ca grass species to increases in atmospheric coa concentrations
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40262
work_keys_str_mv AT wandstephaniejulianeeditha ecophysiologicalresponsesofthemedatriandraforskandothersouthernafricancagrassspeciestoincreasesinatmosphericcoaconcentrations