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Plant Physiology 94:1605-1608 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

A Common Fluence Threshold for First Positive and Second Positive Phototropism in Arabidopsis thaliana1

Abdul Janoudi and Kenneth L. Poff

Michigan State University, Department of Energy Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824

The relationship between the amount of light and the amount of response for any photobiological process can be based on the number of incident quanta per unit time (fluence rate-response) or on the number of incident quanta during a given period of irradiation (fluence-response). Fluence-response and fluence rate-response relationships have been measured for second positive phototropism by seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana. The fluence-response relationships exhibit a single limiting threshold at about 0.01 micromole per square meter when measured at fluence rates from 2.4 x 10–5 to 6.5 x 10–3 micromoles per square meter per second. The threshold values in the fluence rateresponse curves decrease with increasing time of irradiation, but show a common fluence threshold at about 0.01 micromole per square meter. These thresholds are the same as the threshold of about 0.01 micromole per square meter measured for first positive phototropism. Based on these data, it is suggested that second positive curvature has a threshold in time of about 10 minutes. Moreover, if the times of irradiation exceed the time threshold, there is a single limiting fluence threshold at about 0.01 micromole per square meter. Thus, the limiting fluence threshold for second positive phototropism is the same as the fluence threshold for first positive phototropism. Based on these data, we suggest that this common fluence threshold for first positive and second positive phototropism is set by a single photoreceptor pigment system.


1 Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract No. DE-AC02-76ERO-1338.




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Copyright © 1990 by the American Society of Plant Biologists