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Original Articles

Comparative experiments on temperature responses of bryophytes: assimilation, respiration and freezing damage

Pages 317-336 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013
 

Abstract

(1) Temperature-net assimilation and temperature-respiration curves based on manometric measurements at high carbon dioxide concentrations are presented for twenty-three mosses and five hepatics.

(2) In most of the species, the optimum temperature for net assimilation under the experimental conditions was about 25°–30°C and the temperature compensation point about 35°–40°C.

(3) Substantially lower optima and maxima were found in Orthothecium rufescens, Plagiopus oederi, Acrocladium trifarium, Fontinalis squamosa, Nardia compressa and Hookeria lucens.

(4) Several northern and montane species (e.g. Anthelia julacea, Andreaea nivalis, Rhacomitrium lanuginosum) did not differ substantially from the majority of lowland species in the response of net assimilation to temperature. Some substantial differences were found between species of differing habitats.

(5) Most of the mosses and leafy liverworts tested withstood rapid cooling to −5°C for 6 hr. They are evidently protected from intracellular freezing at normal rates of cooling by the withdrawal of water to form extracellular ice.

(6) Conocephalum conicum, Targionia hypophylla and Pellia epiphylla were killed by rapid cooling to −5°C.

(7) Plagiochila spinulosa and Myurium hebridarumwithstood periods of 1–2 weeks at −5°C. Survival of bryophytes for long periods of low temperatures appears to be principally a matter of desiccation resistance.

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