Photosynthetica (Oct 2023)

Strong increase of photosynthetic pigments and leaf size in a pruned Ginkgo biloba tree

  • H.K. LICHTENTHALER,
  • E. ABUSLIMA,
  • P. NICK

DOI
https://doi.org/10.32615/ps.2023.020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 3
pp. 297 – 307

Abstract

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A 50-year-old solitary, sun-exposed ginkgo tree had strongly been pruned in the fall of 2021. Very few buds for the formation of new leaves, twigs, and branches were left over. In spring 2022, these few remaining buds responded with the formation of a different leaf type. These leaves were 2.7 times larger and also thicker than in the years before. In addition, the mean content of total chlorophylls [Chl (a+b)] per leaf area unit of dark-green leaves was 1.45, those of green leaves two times higher as compared to the years before pruning and the two other ginkgo trees which had been investigated in parallel. A comparable increase was also found for the level of total carotenoids (x+c). The mean content for Chl (a+b) were 1,118 mg m-2 for dark-green and 898 mg m-2 for green leaves as compared to 435 to 770 mg m-2 in leaves of other trees. The higher values for Chl (a+b) and total carotenoid content showed up also on a fresh and dry mass basis. Thus, with the formation of a new, larger leaf type by changes in morphology (leaf size and thickness) and the increase of photosynthetic pigments, the pruned ginkgo tree was able to compensate for the much lower number of leaves and photosynthetic units.

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