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Plant Physiology 41:39-44 (1966) © 1966 American Society of Plant Biologists Reduction in Turgor Pressure as a Result of Extremely Brief Exposure to CO2 1Department of Botany, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
CO2 depresses water influx into sunflower hypocotyl segments of low water potential; by contrast, it stimulates flux into segments of high water potential. When segments of high potential were placed in a series of mannitol concentrations and allowed to achieve steady rates of water uptake, influx into CO2-treated tissue in a solution of 3 atm equalled that into control tissue in water. Reasons are given for deducing that a change in internal osmotic concentration ( Water uptake into tissue treated with CO2 for only the first 2 minutes of a 30-minute period was equal to that into tissue treated continuously with CO2, i.e. 3 times the control value. Ten seconds' CO2 treatment produced a significant stimulation. When the cycles of treatment were repeated the samples receiving flashes of CO2 maintained a rate of water uptake superior to that of the control, whereas influx into continuously treated tissue fell below the control value after 1 hour. CO2 treatment applied in a moist air chamber stimulated subsequent water influx when the tissue was transferred to water. Fifteen seconds' treatment was sufficient to produce a marked effect. Even when a transition period of 30 minutes in the moist chamber was interposed between CO2 treatment (5 minutes) and transfer to water, a stimulation was observed. The CO2 effect could be achieved at zero degrees; 5 minutes' treatment in the moist chamber at zero degrees, followed by a 15-minute transition period at the same temperature, substantially increased subsequent water uptake at 25°.
1 This work was supported by Research Grant FG-IS-128 from the United States Department of Agriculture. This article has been cited by other articles:
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