National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Physiological, structural, and biochemical leaf traits of selected Poaceae species involved in oxidative stress protection and acclimation to different light conditions
Hunt, Lena Macrie ; Albrechtová, Jana (advisor) ; Lux, Alexander (referee) ; Šantrůček, Jiří (referee)
This thesis examines physiological, structural, and biochemical leaf traits in grasses (Poaceae family) and how they contribute to oxidative stress protection. Light is a major factor contributing both to oxidative stress in plants and the induction of protective mechanisms at the leaf level. The agriculturally important species barley (Hordeum vulgare) was used to investigate responses to varying irradiance and atmospheric CO2 levels. Barley was further used as a model organism to study the influence of different spectral qualities on oxidative protective mechanisms, particularly phenolic compound induction. This thesis also examines the protective leaf functional traits of wild grass species (Nardus stricta, Calamagrostis villosa, Molinia caerulea, and Deschampsia cespitosa) in a high-irradiance arctic-alpine tundra grassland. Phenolic compounds are important protective secondary metabolites in plants that protect against oxidative stress from high irradiance. This thesis evaluates phenolic compounds and their contributions to plant stress tolerance and introduces a novel method of quantifying the histochemical detection of phenolics in leaf cross-sections. Key results indicate that light quantity and quality play major influential roles in the accumulation of phenolic compounds. High irradiance...

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