Fluorescence imaging as a diagnostic tool for plant stress

Fluorescence imaging as a diagnostic tool for plant stress

update technical focus Fluorescence imaging as a diagnostic tool for plant stress Under normal physiological conditions, the major part of light abs...

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Fluorescence imaging as a diagnostic tool for plant stress Under normal physiological conditions, the major part of light absorbed by the photosynthetic pigments, chlorophylls and carotenoids is used for photosynthetic quantum conversion, and only a small proportion is de-excited via emission as heat or as red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence. In contrast, under many stress conditions, the photosynthetic quantum conversion declines, with a concomitant increase in red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence. Blue and green fluorescence emissions also change under stress. Recently, a high resolution, ultraviolet (UV) laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) imaging system was developed, which images all four fluorescence bands: blue, green, red and far-red. Even small fluorescence gradients are detected, so permitting the early detection of stress. The fluorescence images and the corresponding fluorescence ratio images blue : red

and blue : far-red are particularly sensitive to environmental change and stress. This noninvasive imaging technique can be used to assess the photosynthetic activity of leaves, to monitor the uptake of herbicides by plants, to screen for mineral deficiencies o r as a general indicator of plant stress.

Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis The inverse relationship between photosynthetic performance and chlorophyll fluorescence emission was first described by Kautsky and Hirsch 1, and chlorophyll fluorescence analysis has since made a large contribution to the understanding of photosynthesis and electron transport reactions 2'3. The great advantage of chlorophyll fluorescence analysis is that it can be applied to intact leaves in a noninvasive, nondestructive manner 3-6. Upon illumination, chlorophyll fluorescence has an induction kinetic with two phases: a very fast rise (within 100 ms) via the ground fluorescence (F o) to a maximum fluorescence level (F~) and then, with the onset of photosynthesis, a slow decline (within minutes) to a steady state fluorescence (F~) (Fig. la). The rise and decline in light-induced 'variable chlorophyll fluorescence' (also known as the fast and slow components of the Kautsky effect, respectively) are only seen under physiological photosynthetic

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Fig. 1. The kinetics of fluorescence. (a) Chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics (slow component of the Kautsky effect) in a green leaf darkened for 20 rain prior to illumination, as measured with a fluorometer in the 690 nm fluorescence band. The variable fluorescence decrease ratio (RF~) of the fluorescence decrease (Fd) to the steady state fluorescence (F~) (RF~=FJFs) is an indicator of the potential photosynthetic activity of leaves, and is, wSth open stomata, linearly correlated with the net photosynthetic CO2 assimilation 85'36. Abbreviations: Fo, ground fluorescence; Fro, maximum fluorescence; Fv, variable fluorescence. (b) Ultraviolet-radiation-induced fluorescence emission spectrum of a green maize leaf with fluorescence maxima in the blue [F440 (i.e. near 440 nm)], green (F520), red (F690) and far-red (F740) spectral regions. The four fluorescence bands, applied in the fluorescence imaging of leaves, are indicated by bars.

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August1997,Vol.2,No.8

conditions. Under stress conditions, when the photosynthetic quantum conversion is disturbed or fully inhibited (e.g. by the herbicide diuron), the chlorophyll fluorescence level remains high and the decrease from F m to F~ is slow or does not occur at all 4'7. Various processes are responsible for the chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics (including impaired activity of the two photosystems in darkness, light-induced state 1-state 2 transitions, phosphorylation of light-harvesting proteins, the build-up of a proton gradient, onset of electron transport and COs fixation) 1'5's'~.Here, the focus is on the influence of stress on chlorophyll and blue-green fluorescence and how the fluorescence imaging technique can be used as a diagnostic tool to assess plant stress.

Origin and characteristics of chlorophyll fluorescence The red to far-red chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectrum of intact dark-green leaves is characterized at room temperature by two distinct maxima near 690 and 740 nm, which are termed F690 and F740 (Fig. lb). As isolated pigments, both chlorophylls a and b possess the ability to emit red fluorescence 1°. However, the chlorophyll fluorescence emitted by intact leaves originates from chlorophyll a molecules only, because chlorophyll b molecules transfer their excited states to chlorophyll a (Refs 4, 5 and 11). It is generally accepted that at room temperature chlorophyll fluorescence is derived from photosystem II. The ground fluorescence (Fo) emanates primarily from the light-harvesting pigment antenna, and the variable chlorophyll fluorescence (F~) (Fig. la) from the reaction centre of photosystem II (although the situation is different at extremely low subzero temperatures12). The relative height of the chlorophyll fluorescence emission bands F690 and F740 (as well as their exact wavelength position) depends upon the chlorophyll content of the leaves. At very low concentrations of chlorophylls a and b (<5 mg cm -2 leaf area), the red F690 band (then near to 684 nm) is much higher than the far-red fluorescence band F740, which only exists as a shoulder between 730 and 740 nm (Refs 4, 13 and 14). With increasing chlorophyll a and b content, the red F690 band shifts to longer wavelengths (from 684 to 693 nm) and decreases to yield a low peak or a shoulder, whereas the far-red fluorescence F730-740 increases to a distinct maximum; in dark-green leaves this is at 740 nm. This change in the F690 and F740 emission is caused by overlap between the emitted F690 fluorescence band and the in vivo absorption bands of chlorophyll a,

© 1997ElsevierScienceLtd

update causing a re-absorption of the F690 band 4'5. As a consequence, the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690 : F740 is a noninvasive indicator of the in vivo chlorophyll content of leaves 4'~3-~5.

Chlorophyll fluorescence and plant stress Throughout their life, plants are exposed to a multitude of biotic and abiotic stress conditions 16. Because stress can lead, directly or indirectly, to modification or damage of the photosynthetic apparatus, various types of chlorophyll fluorescence signatures have been considered to be indicative of stress 3'4's'9~z. These parameters include: components of the induction kinetics and the variable chlorophyll fluorescence ratios, such as F~ : F=, F~ : Fo, and the variable fluorescence decrease ratio R E. (= FJF~), measured at 690 and 735 nln)~6's'9'lT'ls;the quenching coefficients qP and qN (Refs 5, 8 and 9); and the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690 : F740 (Refs 13, 14 and 15). Under stress conditions, the photosynthetic apparatus exhibits characteristic symptoms, including: an increase in total chlorophyll fluorescence; a strong decline in F~, Fd, and in the ratios of variable fluorescence F~ : F m and R~d (at 690 and 735 nm); a 30% increase of the ratio F690 : F740; and an increase of qN. Short-term stress events (minutes to hours) disturb the photosynthetic performance. Longterm stress events (days to weeks) result in a decline in the chlorophyll content,~which can easily be monitored via the increase in the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690 : F740. Characteristics and origin of blue-green fluorescence The UV-radiation-induced, blue-green fluorescence emission of leaves and plants is characterized by a maximum in the blue region near 430-450 nm, and a shoulder in the green region near 520-530 nm (Fig. lb). The blue-green fluorescence of leaves was noted by Kautsky 1 and by botanists working with the fluorescence microscope, but its spectral composition has only been studied recently ~s-22. In contrast to chlorophyll fluorescence, blue-green fluorescence does not exhibit any induction kinetics 23. Grasses and crop plants of the Poaceae (e.g. wheat, barley and maize) exhibit a high blue-green fluorescence, which can be greater than the chlorophyll fluorescence (Fig. lb). In contrast, leaves of dicotyledons (including spinach, tobacco and beech) ls'2°'22'24exhibit a very low blue-green fluorescence that is much lower than the chlorophyll fluorescence ls'2°'2~. Blue and green fluorescence are primarily emitted from two cinnamic acids,

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Fig. 2. Set-up of the Karlsruhe/Strasbourg laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) imaging system for detection of small stress-induced gradients in blue, green, red and far-red fluorescence emission over the whole leaf area 2s,84. The fluorescence is excited by a pulsed Nd:YAG-laser at 355 nm; this wavelength is a compromise to excite the blue-green and the red fluorescence simultaneously 33. The fluorescence emitted, shown here for one leaf pixel, is simultaneously collected from several hundred pixels of the leaf area by a CCD (charge-coupled device) camera. The fluorescence bands F440 (i.e. near 440 nm), F520, F690 and F740 are selected by appropriate filters, the signals intensified, and then stored by the image processing system. In most cases leaves are illuminated by white light (or sunlight) in order to screen the red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence in the steady state.

p-coumaric acid and ferulic acid, which are covalently bound to the cellulosic cell wall 2~. In cell walls of maize leaves, a third as yet unidentified cinnamic acid is present in lower amounts along with a blue-greenfluorescent flavone. The cell walls of plants from the Poaceae possess a higher concentration of cinnamic acids than the cell walls of dicotyledons (H. Lichtenthaler and J. Schweiger, unpublished); this is in agreement with their higher blue-green fluorescence emission. Although the bluegreen fluorescence signal is primarily emitted by the cell walls 24'26,it is evident that the soluble and extractable cinnamic acids, flavones, flavonols and their glycosides, which are bound to cell vacuoles (particularly in epidermal cells), can also contribute to the emission of blue-green fluorescence. Blue-green fluorescence is emitted not only by green leaves, but also by nongreen plant tissue such as roots, white flower petals or white parts of variegated leaves t6'22'27,2s. In green leaves, the bluegreen fluorescence emanates predominantly from the chlorophyll-free epidermal cells and the major leaf veins, whereas the cell walls of the green mesophyll cells contribute very little 24'29. This is because in green mesophyll cells the blue-green fluorescence is reabsorbed by the photosynthetic pigments 1~'2~,which possess broad absorption bands in the blue-green region. White leaves exhibit the highest blue-green fluorescence, and the lowest signal is found in

fully green leaves with a high chlorophyll content 2~.

Blue-green fluorescence and stress Long-term stress events and mineral deficiencies eventually reduce the chlorophyll and carotenoid content of leaves. The blue-green fluorescence emission thus increases as the reabsorption of blue-green fluorescence is reduced. In addition, the composition of soluble plant phenolics (including flavones, flavonols, cinnamic acids, coumarins and stilbens) in the epidermal cells can change under stress conditions, so that the blue and/or green fluorescence emission of leaves increases. This increase may precede the loss of chlorophyll or carotenoid content in the mesophy]l cells. In Rhododendron leaves exposed to severe high-light stress, the level of total flavonols was more than twice as high as in the half-shade leaves, and the green fluorescence signal increased to a much higher degree than the blue fluorescence 3°. Other green-fluorescing substances include the flavonoid quercetin, the alcaloid berberine and riboflavin ~1. These observations indicate that the ratio of blue to green fluorescence F440 : F520 can change under certain stress conditions. Following herbicide treatment (diuron), photosynthetic electron transport becomes blocked, and red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence strongly increase 13'1s,but blu6green fluorescence either remains the same or only varies slightly 18'32. In such Cases, August 1997,VoL 2, No, 8

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update fluorescence emission 25's~. As a consequence, the fluorescence ratios blue : red (F440 : F690) and blue : far-red (F440 : F740) strongly increase ~5'27'3z.Indeed, these two fluorescence ratios have proved to be very sensitive to changes in growth conditions as well as stress events, and appear to change even before any damage to the photosynthetic apparatus is apparent ls'25.

Fluorescence imaging and point data measurements

Fig. 3. Laser-induced fluorescence images of a tobacco aurea mutant lower leaf surface. The upper four panels show blue [F440 (i.e. near 440 nm] and green (F520) fluorescence, as well as red (F690) and far-red (F740) chlorophyll fluorescence. The fluorescence intensity is shown by false colour from blue (zero fluorescence yield) via green and yellow to red (highest fluorescence yield)2s. The lower four panels show images of the three fluorescence ratios blue : red (F440/F690), blue : far-red (F440/F740) and blue : green (F440/F520), and of the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio red : far-red (F690/F740). The colour scales shown are numbered using arbitrary units.

Fluorescence images taken by M. Sowinska, F. Heisel and M. Lang.

blue-green fluorescence emission can be used as an internal fluorescence standard. In fact, the corresponding fluorescence ratios blue : red (F440 : F690) and blue : far-red (F440 : F740) significantly decline, whereas the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (F690 : F740), as initiated by the diuronenhanced chlorophyll fluorescence emission, increases by about 30% (Refs 18, 27 and 32). Under various stress conditions (high light exposure, enhanced UV radiation, drought and temperature stress) additional UV-absorbing and/or UV-scattering substances are formed in the epidermal cells, which then form a barrier to the penetration of UV radiation into the mesophyll cells. The proportion of UV radiation that passes through the epidermis into the leaf mesophyll is strongly reduced and results in a dramatic reduction in chlorophyll 31 8

August1997,Vol. 2, No. 8

In the conventional spectrofluorometers hitherto used to assess chlorophyll fluorescence and blue-green fluorescence, emission spectra are either recorded or the fluorescence is screened in one or all of the four bands blue, green, red and far-red (Fig. lb). Stress can then be detected via changes in the fluorescence intensity and fluorescence ratios. However, this analysis is restricted to a point on a single leaf, and it is doubtful whether the fluorescence information at this point is really representative of the whole leaf area. Gradients in the fluorescence emission between the margins and the central lamella, or between the tip and the petiole (which might be early stress indicators) remain hidden by such point data measurements. In fact, early stress events or attacks by pathogens rarely affect the whole leaf area at once. This disadvantage of point data measurements, which prohibit an early stress diagnosis, can be overcome by simultaneously recording the fluorescence information at all points of the leaf area using a new approach, fluorescence imaging.

Fluorescence imaging of leaves and plants A LIF imaging system has been developed that screens the blue, green, red and farred fluorescence of leaves 2s-3°'34(Fig. 2). The advantage of this system is that it simultaneously records the LIF signatures for several hundred pixels over the whole leaf area, or even of several leaves or plants. With this technique it has been shown that the blue and green fluorescence emission is not evenly distributed over the leaf area, but primarily emanates from the main and side veins (Fig. 3, upper panelsfi 8,29.In contrast, the red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence is predominantly emitted from the vein-free leaf regions, showing a negative contrast with the blue-green fluorescence. Using the image processing system, the various fluorescence ratios (blue : red, blue : far-red, blue : green) and the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (red : far-red) are calculated for each of the several hundred pixels of the leaf area 27'2s. In this way, the differences in fluorescence emission in the four

Fig. 4. False-colour fluorescence images of the laser-induced red [F690 (i.e. near 690 nm)] and far-red (F740) chlorophyll fluorescence emission in a green tobacco leaf after drought stress and a 6 h heat stress treatment, showing the gradient in chlorophyll fluorescence from the margins to the centre of the leaf. The fluorescence intensity is shown by false colour, increasing from blue via green and yellow to red (highest intensity) s°. Fluorescence images

taken by M. Sowinska, F. Heisel and M. Lang.

fluorescence bands can be quantitated in relative proportions (Fig. 3, lower panels).

Fluorescence imaging of plant stress Fluorescence images and LIF ratio images of the whole leaf area permit an analysis of stress-induced changes in fluorescence emission (e.g. gradients within the leaf and local rises or inconsistencies) at a very early stage of stress. This may be before damage symptoms become visible, and at a time when counter measures can still be taken to protect the plant. An example of an early heat and drought stress, which is seen as a gradient in the LIF image from the leaf margin to the leaf centre, is shown for the red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence in Fig. 4. After 6 h heat stress, both fluorescences, F690 and F740, had increased at the leaf margin, because of a heat-induced decline in the photosynthetic quantum conversion; the chlorophyll fluorescence yield of the centre of the leaf was not yet affected. The heat treatment had almost no effect on the blue-green fluorescence emission, and thus the fluorescence ratio F440 : F690 decreased at the leaf rim parts by 60%. In contrast, the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690 : F740 only increased slightly (<20%), indicating that chlorophyll breakdown had not yet occurred. When these tobacco plants were watered only one week after the heat stress treatment, visible necrosis of the leaf margin developed within two to three weeks. In contrast, in plants watered directly after the heat treatment, the necrosis did not appear. Using LIF images and LIF ratio images, various other stresses have also been

update aequorins 37'38. The LIF imaging system already works at 20 cm to 10 m, and thus it should be relatively easy to develop for field experiments and remote sensing of terrestrial vegetation. There are wide possibilities for LIF imaging in agriculture, forest decline and environmental research:

screened, including: mite attack in bean plants2~; combined light, heat and drought stress in sun-exposed leaves of Prunus and Rhododendron29; long-term drought stress in tobacco2~; and herbicide uptake 2s'32and nutrient deficiencies (Fe, Mg, Zn, N) in maize 34. The type of stress and the response mechanisms of plants determine which fluorescence ratios decline and which increase. However, although the changes in fluorescence ratios allow early stress detection, they do not directly identify the type of imposed stress. Nevertheless, from the way in which the four fluorescence ratios change, it is at least possible to exclude several stresses. Herbicide uptake and decline in photosynthetic activity The photosynthetic activity of leaves and the uptake of the herbicide diuron, which blocks photosynthetic electron transport and quantum conversion by binding to the D1 protein of photosystem II, can easily be studied by fluorescence imaging. In this analysis, the measurements centre on the imaging of the red chlorophyll fluorescence (F690) at F m and F~ (reached after 5 min illumination with white light) (see Fig. 1), In the control leaf, the high chlorophyll fluorescence yield at F m decreased evenly over the whole leaf area to F~ (Fig. 5, upper panels). In contrast, in the leaf of the Digitalis plant, which had been treated with 10 -° M dinron (via the roots), F m only decreased to F S in those leaf parts that were still free of the herbicide. Thus the uptake of the herbicide diuron is visualized in the LIF images by a failure of the chlorophyll fluorescence to decline from F~ to F~. This decline in chlorophyll fluorescence from F mto F, can be quantified via the variable fluorescence decrease ratio RFd, which is a function of the potential photosynthetic capacity of leaves 3~'3~. Such Rra ratio images (Fig. 5, lower panels) show in the leaf of the control plant, high R~d values being evenly distributed over the leaf area, thus indicating that all leaf parts are active in photosynthetic quantum conversion. In contrast, in the diuron-treated plant, the increasing loss of photosynthetic function with increasing exposure time (48-84 h) is seen in the increasing decline of the R~ values to zero in the centre of the leaf an~ near the leaf veins through which diuron is successively transported into the leaf. Conclusion Fluorescence imaging with LIF images and LIF ratio images represents a superior means of detecting early stress in plants. This high resolution method is more precise and provides stress information at an

Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Joachim Schweiger and Oliver Wenzel for assistance, Inge Jansche and Doris MSller for typing the manuscript, and Gabrielle Johnson for checking the English. Financial support by a grant from the European Union within the lnco-Copernicus program is gratefully acknowledged. Dedication This article is dedicated to Prof. Dr Benno Parthier, on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Hartmut K. Lichtenthaler* Fig. 5. The upper four panels show differences in the decline of the red chlorophyll fluorescence [F690 (i.e. near 690 nm)] from maximum fluorescence, Fro, to steady state fluorescence, F,, in green attached Digitalis leaves, from a control plant and a plant treated with the herbicide diuron (10 -5 M) via the roots. Fm was measured upon illumination of a leaf kept in darkness for 20 rain, and F, in the steady state of the fluorescence kinetics 6 rain after the introduction of the light. The fluorescence intensity is shown by false colour, with increasing values from blue via green and yellow to red. The four lower panels show fluorescence images of the variable chlorophyll fluorescence ratio RE, of a green attached Digitalis leaf;, indicating the loss of photosynthetic activity with increasing uptake time of diuron applied via the roots (10 -5 M). The decrease and loss in photosynthetic function are indicated by the decline in the R F values measured at 690 nm, showr~ here by false colour. Fluorescence images taken by M. Sowinska, F. Heisel and M. Lang.

earlier stage than point data fluorescence measurements. The LIF imaging technique is noninvasive, does not require a pretreatment of the plant tissue and can be applied to a screen of whole leaves and plants. For this reason, it is also superior to other new techniques such as the imaging of stressinduced changes in cellular calcium levels after transformation with recombinant

The Botanical Institute, University of Karlsruhe, Kaiserstra6e 12, D-76128 Kadsruhe, Germany

Joseph A. Mieh~ Groupe d'Optique Appliquee, Centre des Recherches Nucl6aires, 23 rue du Loess, F-67037 Strasbourg Cedex 2, France *Author for correspondence (tel +49 721 6083833; fax +49 721 6084874; e-mail hartmut,[email protected]).

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update 8 Krause, G.H. and Weis, E. (1991) Chlorophyll fluorescence and photosynthesis: the basics, Annu. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 42, 313-349 9 Schreiber, U., Schliwa, U. and Bilger, W. (1986) Continuous recording of photochemical and non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching with a new type of modulation fluorometer, Photosynth. Res. 10, 51-62 10 Lichtenthaler, H.K. and Pfister, K. (1978) Praktikum der Photosynthese, Quelle und Meyer 11 Papageorgiou, G. (1975) Chlorophyll fluorescence: an intrinsic probe of photosynthesis, in Bioenergetics of Photosynthesis (Govindjee,ed.), pp. 319-371, Academic Press 12 Siffel, P. and Sest~k, Z. (1988) Low temperature fluorescence spectra of chloroplasts: methodical aspects and possible applications, in Applications of Chlorophyll Fluorescence (Lichtenthaler, H.K., ed.), pp. 55-61, Kluwer ]3 Lichtenthaler, H.K., H~k, R. and Rinderle, U. (1990) The chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690/F730 in leaves of different chlorophyll content, Photosynth. Res. 25, 295-298 14 H~k, R., Lichtanthaler, H.K. and Rinderle, U. (1990) Decrease of the fluorescence ratio F690/F730 during greening and development of leaves, Radiat. Environ. Biophys. 29, 329-336 15 D'Ambrosio,N., Szabo, K. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1992) Increase of the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690/F735 during the autumnal chlorophyll breakdown, Radiat. Environ. Biophys. 31, 51-62 16 Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1996) Vegetation stress: an introduction to the stress concepts in plants, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 4-14 17 Babani, F., Lichtenthaler, H.K. and Richter, R. (1996) Changes of chlorophyll fluorescence signatures during greening of etiolated barley seedlings as measured with the CCD-OMA fluorometer, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 471-477 18 Edner, H. et al. (1995) Remote multi-colour fluorescence imaging of selected broad-leaf plants, EARSel Adv. Remote Sensing 3, 2-14 19 Chappelle, E.W. et al. (1985) Laser-induced fluorescence of green plants. 3 LIF spectral signatures of five major plant types, Appl. Opt. 24, 74-80 20 Lang, M. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1991) Changes in the blue-green and red fluorescence emission spectra of beech leaves during the autumnal chlorophyll breakdown, J. Plant Physiol. 138, 550-553 21 Morales, F., Cerovic, Z.G. and Moya, I. (1994) Characterization of blue-green fluorescence in the mesophyll of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) leaves affected by iron deficiency,J. Plant Physiol. 106, 127-133 22 Stober, F., Lung, M. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1994) Studies on the blue, green and red fluorescence signatures of green, etiolated and white leaves, Remote Sensing Environ. 47, 65-71 23 Stober, F. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1993) Studies on the constancy of the blue and green fluorescence yield during the chlorophyll 32{}

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fluorescence induction kinetics (Kautsky effect), Radiat. Environ. Biophys. 32, 357-365 24 Stober, F. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1993) Studies on the localization and spectral characteristics of the fluorescence emission of differently pigmented wheat leaves, Bot. Acta 106, 365-370 25 Stober, F. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1993) Characterisation of the laser-induced blue, green and red fluorescence signatures of leaves of wheat and soybean leaves grown under different irradiance, Physiol. Plant. 88, 696-704 26 Harris, P.J. and Hartley, R.D. (1976) Detection of bound ferulic acid in cell walls of the gramineae by ultraviolet fluorescence microscopy,Nature 258, 508-510 27 Lang, M. (1995) Studies on the blue-green and chlorophyll fluorescences of plants and their application for fluorescence imaging of leaves, Karlsruhe Contrib. Plant Physiol. 29, 1-110 28 Lichtenthaler, H.K. et al. (1996) Detection of vegetation stress via a new high resolution fluorescence imaging system, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 599-612 29 Lang, M. et al. (1994) Blue, green and red fluorescence signatures and images of tobacco leaves, Bot. Acta 107, 230-236 30 Lang, M. et al. (1996) Fluorescence imaging of water and temperature stress in plant leaves, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 613-621 31 Lung, M., Stober, F. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1991) Fluorescence emission spectra of plant leaves and plant constituents, Radiat. Environ. Biophys. 30, 333-347 32 Lichtenthaler, H.K. et al. (1997) Uptake of the herbicide diuron (DCMU) as visualized by the fluorescence imaging technique, Bot. Acta 110, 158-163 33 Schweiger, J., Lang, M. and Lichtenthaler, H.K. (1996) Differences in fluorescence excitation spectra of leaves between stressed and non-stressed plants, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 536-547 34 Heisel, F. et al. (1996) Detection of nutrient deficiencies of maize by laser-induced fluorescence imaging, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 622-631 35 Tuba, Z. et al. (1994) Reconstitution of chlorophylls and photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in the desiccated poikilochlorophyllousplant Xerophyta scabrida upon rehydration, Planta 192, 414-420 36 Babani, F. and Lichteathaler, H.K. (1996) Light-induced and age-dependent development of chloroplasts in etiolated barley leaves as visualized by determination of photosynthetic pigments, COs assimilation rates and different kinds of chlorophyll fluorescence ratios, J. Plant Physiol. 148, 555-566 37 Knight, M.R. et al. (1993) Imaging calcium dynamics in living plants using semi-synthetic recombinant aequorins, J. Cell Biol. 121, 83-90 38 Knight, H. and Knight, M.R. (1995) Recombinant aequorin methods for intracelhilar calcium measurements in plants, Methods Cell Biol. 49, 201-216

book reviews

Xerophytes re-evaluated Structure-Function Relations of Warm Desert Plants

by A.C. Gibson Springer, Adaptations of Desert Organisms, 1996. DM188.00 (xi + 215 pages) ISBN 3 540 59267 9

In this book, the author, who is a wellknown researcher on the a n a t o m y of cacti, presents a re-evaluation of the s t r u c t u r e - f u n c t i o n relations of warm desert plants. The thesis is that the structural designs related to storing or conserving water - which are often referred to as xerophytic or xeromorphic features - have mainly been derived from plants of semiarid regions, and are not at all typical of plants from warm, lowland deserts. Warm deserts are defined as arid regions contained within the 200 mm isohyet (an isohyet is a line on a map connecting places with equal rainfall), and having mean monthly temperatures that exceed 20°C in the hottest month and 9°C in the coldest month, without frost except for very short periods. As admitted by the author, this definition is problematic, because it unites deserts of quite different types - ranging from those with only erratic, unreliable precipitation to those with predictable winter or summer rainfall, and fog deserts. A quick look through descriptions of the vegetation of various deserts reveals that different climatic regimes almost certainly triggered the evolution of different life forms and survival strategies. For example, in the warm desert of southwestern Africa (broadly, the Namib desert), the winter rainfall portion is dominated by leaf succulents; the summer rainfall portion is dominated by woody plants, and succulents are only represented by stem succulents

© 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd