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Productivity of leaves of a tropical tree, Theobroma cacao, grown under shading, in relation to leaf age and light conditions within the canopy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 1997

KEN-ICHI MIYAJI
Affiliation:
Institute for Environmental Control Technology, College of Agriculture, University of Osaka Prefecture, Sakai 591, Japan
WALNY S. da SILVA
Affiliation:
Centro de Pesquisas do Cacau, Km 22 da Rodovia, Ilhéus/Itabuna, Itabuna, Bahia, Brazil
PAULO de T. ALVIM
Affiliation:
Centro de Pesquisas do Cacau, Km 22 da Rodovia, Ilhéus/Itabuna, Itabuna, Bahia, Brazil
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Abstract

The photosynthetic and respiratory activities of the leaves of a tropical tree, cacao, Theobroma cacao L., grown under shading, were determined in relation to leaf age and light conditions within the canopy, in order to gain a deeper insight into characteristics of the leaf population composing a canopy.

The specific leaf weight and leaf water content varied with the height of leaves from the ground and/or the irradiance. The net photosynthetic rate also varied markedly depending on leaf age and irradiance. The leaves in full or nearly full irradiance (<70% full daylight) attained the maximum rate c. 60 d after the leaves emerged, and the rate decreased to nearly zero at a leaf age of c. 270 d.

The nocturnal leaf respiratory activity was proportional to the photosynthetic activity during the day, but the proportional ratio was not constant throughout the survival period of leaves. Within the closed canopy, the upper leaves, which much higher ratios of respiratory to photosynthetic activity, under full or nearly full irradiance, tended to have much shorter mean longevities (c. 160 d) than the lower leaves under a lower irradiance (c. 310 d).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Trustees of the New Phytologist 1997

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