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Morphological and physiological responses of bean plants to supplemental UV radiation in a Mediterranean climate

TitleMorphological and physiological responses of bean plants to supplemental UV radiation in a Mediterranean climate
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication1997
AuthorsAntonelli, Francesca, Grifoni D., Sabatini F., and Zipoli G.
JournalPlant Ecology
Volume128
Pagination127-136
ISSN13850237
KeywordsPhaseolus (angiosperm), Phaseolus vulgaris
Abstract

During the last few decades many experiments have been performed to evaluate the responses of plants to enhanced solar UV-B radiation (280-320 nm) that may occur because of stratospheric ozone depletion; most of them were performed in controlled environment conditions where plants were exposed to low photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) levels and high UV-B irradiance. Since environmental radiative regimes can play a role in the response of plants to UV-B enhancement, it appears doubtful whether it is valid to extrapolate the results from these experiments to plants grown in natural conditions. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effects on physiology and morphology of a bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) cultivar Nano Bobis, exposed to supplemental UV radiation in the open-air. UV-B radiation was supplied by fluorescent lamps to simulate a 20% stratospheric ozone reduction. Three groups of plants were grown: control (no supplemental UV), UV-A treatment (supplementation in the UV-A band) and UV-B treatment (supplemental UV-B and UV-A radiation). Each group was replicated three times. After 33 days of treatment plants grown under UV-B treatment had lower biomass, leaf area and reduced leaf elongation compared to UV-A treatment. No significant differences were detected in photosynthetic parameters, photosynthetic pigments and UV-B absorbing compounds among the three groups of plants. However, plants exposed to UV-A treatment showed a sort of 'stimulation' of their growth when compared to the control. The results of this experiment showed that plants may be sensitive to UV-A radiation, thus it is difficult to evaluate the specific effects of UV-B (280-320 nm) radiation from fluorescent lamps and it is important to choose the appropriate control. Environmental conditions strongly affect plant response to UV radiation so further field studies are necessary to assess the interaction between UV-B exposure and meteorological variability.

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Citation KeyAntonelli1997127