Sunday, October 24, 2010

CO2 Generator WILL increase yields REGARDLESS of LIGHT intensity



The common belief in hydroponic gardening circles is that CO2 enrichment of grow room atmosphere can increase yields
ONLY if the grow lights intensity is significantly increased compare to normal.
The following body of recent scientific studies of the subject matter show, that it is NOT SO!

According to the following study data, using CO2 generator or CO2 injection in hydroponic grow room WILL significantly stimulate plant photosynthesis regardless of whether the grow light
intensity is increased or remains the constant with addition of CO2 generator.

Enjoy the reading:

In Less-than Optimal Light Conditions, Higher CO2 Means More Plant Growth
In the case of light, Idso and Idso (1994) analyzed 37 CO2 enrichment experiments conducted over a ten year span in which plants were grown under both ideal and less-than-ideal light conditions. Results indicated that decreasing light intensity had no significant effect on plant photosynthetic response to atmospheric CO2 enrichment until the lowest light intensity of the 37 experiments studied was encountered. And at that point the photosynthetic stimulation provided by a 300-ppm increase in atmospheric CO2 actually rose, from 66% to 80%; while for a 600-ppm increase in CO2 it rose even further, from 111% to 194%, under the same circumstances.

(SEE IMAGE ABOVE)


Studies published subsequent to the review of Idso and Idso have continued to demonstrate that low light intensities do not negate the beneficial effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment on plant growth and development. In fact, in a study of forest understory plants, Osborne et al. (1997) observed that elevated CO2 concentrations allowed for a positive net photosynthetic uptake of carbon on days and at locations that typically experienced light intensities so low that they were generally insufficient for positive net photosynthesis under current atmospheric CO2 concentrations. This consequence of atmospheric CO2 enrichment enabled the plants to live where they currently cannot due to a lack of sufficient light. Hence, Osborne et al. concluded that "the potential range of habitats that such species could occupy will expand considerably with rising atmospheric CO2."

One year later, Kerstiens (1998) analyzed the results of 15 previously published studies of trees having differing degrees of shade tolerance, finding that elevated CO2 caused greater relative biomass increases in shade-tolerant species than in shade-intolerant or sun-loving species. In fact, in more than half of the studies analyzed, shade-tolerant species experienced CO2-induced relative growth increases that were two to three times greater than those of less shade-tolerant species.

In an extended follow-up review analyzing 74 observations from 24 studies, Kerstiens (2001) reported that twice-ambient CO2 concentrations increased the relative growth response of shade-tolerant and shade-intolerant woody species by an average of 51 and 18%, respectively. Moreover, similar results were reported by Poorter and Perez-Soba (2001), who performed a detailed meta-analysis of research results pertaining to this topic, and more recently by Kubiske et al. (2002), who measured photosynthetic acclimation in aspen and sugar maple trees. Low light intensity, therefore, is by no means a roadblock to the benefits that come to plants as a consequence of an increase in the air's CO2 content.

Of course, most general rules do have their exceptions. In one such study, a 200-ppm increase in the air's CO2 concentration enhanced the photosynthetic rates of sunlit and shaded leaves of sweetgum trees by 92 and 54%, respectively, at one time of year, and by 166 and 68% at another time (Herrick and Thomas, 1999). Likewise, Naumburg and Ellsworth (2000) reported that a 200-ppm increase in the air's CO2 content boosted steady-state photosynthetic rates in leaves of four hardwood understory species by an average of 60 and 40% under high and low light intensities, respectively. Thus, even though these photosynthetic responses were significantly less in shaded leaves, they were still substantial, with mean increases ranging from 40 to 68% for a 60% increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration. And that's anything but shabby!

Under extremely low light intensities, the benefits arising from atmospheric CO2 enrichment may be small, but oftentimes they are very important in terms of plant carbon budgeting. In the study of Hattenschwiler (2001), for example, seedlings of five temperate forest species subjected to an additional 200 ppm of CO2 under light intensities that were only 3.4 and 1.3% of full sunlight exhibited CO2-induced biomass increases that ranged from 17 to 74%. Similarly, in the study of Naumburg et al. (2001), a 200-ppm increase in the air's CO2 content enhanced photosynthetic carbon uptake in three of four hardwood understory species by more than two-fold in three of the four species under light irradiances that were as low as 3% of full sunlight.

So, whether light intensity is high or low, or leaves are shaded or sunlit, when the CO2 content of the air is increased, so too are the various biological processes that lead to plant robustness also increased. Less than optimal light intensities, therefore, clearly do not negate the beneficial effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment.


http://www.plantsneedco2.org/default.aspx?menuitemid=331&AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1



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