ARTICLES

Effects of Leaf Position and Plant Age on Photosynthesis and Translocation in Peanut I. Apparent Photosynthesis and 14C Translocation¹

Authors: , ,

Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to determine the contribution of leaves at different stem positions to photosynthesis of peanut plants, and the change in this contribution with plant age. Apparent photosynthesis (AP) and translocation of assimilated 14C were determined on leaves 3, 5, and 8 from the tip of a cotyledonary lateral branch of the Florunner cultivar of peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) at 80, 110 and 140 days after planting. To determine 14C-photo-synthate translocation individual leaves were exposed for 15 min to 14CO2 and plants harvested 24 hr later were analyzed for 14C. Translocation was computed as the percentage of total 14C in the plant which was in plant parts other than the labeled leaf.

Highest AP was observed for leaf 3, the youngest fully expanded leaf on the branch, and the lowest AP for leaf 8. Leaf 5 exhibited intermediate AP rates. AP decreased with plant age, the average decrease in two experiments being 21 and 58% from 80 to 110 and 140 days, respectively. The decline in AP with plant age was similar in both experiments. The percentage of 14C translocated from labeled leaves for the two experiments averaged 64% and was not significantly affected by plant age. A significantly greater percentage (76%) of the 14C fixed was translocated from leaf 3 in Experiment II than from leaves 5 and 8 which averaged 55%. Leaf position had no effect on 14C translocation in Experiment I. These data indicate that leaves near the periphery of the peanut plant contribute most during pod filling and that the photo-synthetic capacity of all leaves decreases during this period.

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Keywords: Arachis hypogaea L, Photosynthate translocation, Apparent photosynthesis, Leaf position, Plant age

How to Cite: Henning, R. , Brown, R. & Ashley, D. (1979) “Effects of Leaf Position and Plant Age on Photosynthesis and Translocation in Peanut I. Apparent Photosynthesis and 14C Translocation¹”, Peanut Science. 6(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.3146/i0095-3679-6-1-9

Author Notes

1Contribution of the Department of Agronomy and Cooperative Extension Service, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602. The reported research was supported by state, Hatch, and Georgia Agricultural Commodity Commission for Peanuts funds allocated to the Ga. Agric. Exp. Stns.

3USDA Peanut Market News. 1975. LVII, No. 24.