Estimating leaf day respiration from conventional gas exchange measurements.
Xinyou YinJeffrey S AmthorPublished in: The New phytologist (2023)
Leaf day respiration (R d ) strongly influences carbon-use efficiencies of whole plants and the global terrestrial biosphere. It has long been thought that R d is slower than respiration in the dark at a given temperature, but measuring R d by gas exchange remains a challenge because leaves in the light are also photosynthesizing. The Kok method and the Laisk method are widely used to estimate R d . We highlight theoretical limitations of these popular methods, and recent progress toward their improvement by using additional information from chlorophyll fluorescence and by accounting for the photosynthetic reassimilation of respired CO 2 . The latest evidence for daytime CO 2 and energy release from the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in chloroplasts appears to be important to understanding R d .