Effects of elevated CO₂ and temperature on secondary compounds in the needles of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.)
2008
Räisänen, Tommi | Ryyppö, Aija | Julkunen-Tiitto, Riitta | Kellomäki, Seppo
The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term effects of elevated CO₂ concentration (doubling of ambient CO₂ concentration) and temperature (2-6°C elevation) on the concentration and content of secondary compounds in the needles of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) saplings grown in closed-top environmental chambers. The chamber treatments included (1) ambient temperature and CO₂, (2) ambient temperature and elevated CO₂, (3) elevated temperature and ambient CO₂, and (4) elevated temperature and elevated CO₂. The needle sampling and analyses of monoterpenes, HPLC-phenolics and condensed tannins in current- and 1-year-old needles were made in two consecutive years. The results showed that the effects of elevation of CO₂ and temperature were greatest on the monoterpene concentration in the needles while the concentration of HPLC-phenolics remained almost unaffected by the changed growing conditions. Most of the observed decrease in monoterpene concentration was caused by the CO₂ enrichment while the effect of elevated temperature alone was not as significant. The accumulation of condensed tannins tended to increase due to the elevation of CO₂ alone compensating the reduced carbon allocation to monoterpenes. Overall, the responses of the concentrations of secondary compounds to the elevation of CO₂ and temperature are variable and depend strongly on the properties and characteristics of each compound as well as on the interrelation between the production of these compounds and the primary production of trees.
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