All Stories

  1. Canopy leaf area index at its higher end: dissection of structural controls from leaf to canopy scales in bryophytes
  2. Controls of the quantum yield and saturation light of isoprene emission in different-aged aspen leaves
  3. Urban plant physiology: adaptation-mitigation strategies under permanent stress
  4. Cohort-specific tuning of foliage physiology to interacting stresses in evergreens
  5. Fungal infection increases volatile release
  6. Coping with low light under high atmospheric dryness: shade acclimation in a Mediterranean conifer (Abies pinsapo Boiss.)
  7. How light, temperature, and measurement and growth [CO2] interactively control isoprene emission in hybrid aspen
  8. Worldwide variation in within-canopy plasticity
  9. Acclimation of isoprene emission and photosynthesis to growth temperature in hybrid aspen: resolving structural and physiological controls
  10. Is there a species spectrum within the world‐wide leaf economics spectrum? Major variations in leaf functional traits in the Mediterranean sclerophyll Quercus ilex
  11. Influence of microwave frequency electromagnetic radiation on terpene emission and content in aromatic plants
  12. Rubisco catalytic properties optimized for present and future climatic conditions
  13. Photosynthetic responses to stress in Mediterranean evergreens: Mechanisms and models
  14. Are leaf functional traits ‘invariant’ with plant size and what is ‘invariance’ anyway?
  15. Changes in floral bouquets from compound‐specific responses to increasing temperatures
  16. Tree age-dependent changes in photosynthetic and respiratory CO2 exchange in leaves of micropropagated diploid, triploid and hybrid aspen
  17. Which is a better predictor of plant traits: temperature or precipitation?
  18. Plant volatiles in polluted atmospheres: stress responses and signal degradation
  19. A fully integrated isoprenoid emissions model coupling emissions to photosynthetic characteristics
  20. Improving modeling of the 'dark part' of canopy carbon gain
  21. Drought-Tolerance of Wheat Improved by Rhizosphere Bacteria from Harsh Environments: Enhanced Biomass Production and Reduced Emissions of Stress Volatiles
  22. Bidirectional exchange of biogenic volatiles with vegetation: emission sources, reactions, breakdown and deposition
  23. Volatile organic compound emissions from Alnus glutinosa under interacting drought and herbivory stresses
  24. A model of plant isoprene emission based on available reducing power captures responses to atmospheric CO2
  25. Functional distinctiveness of major plant lineages
  26. Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry Method for Determination of Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds Emitted by Plants
  27. Isoprenoid emissions, photosynthesis and mesophyll diffusion conductance in response to blue light
  28. Elevated [CO2] magnifies isoprene emissions under heat and improves thermal resistance in hybrid aspen
  29. Competition between isoprene emission and pigment synthesis during leaf development in aspen
  30. Scaling Light Harvesting from Moss “Leaves” to Canopies
  31. Diffusional conductances to CO2 as a target for increasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic water-use efficiency
  32. Isoprene function in two contrasting poplars under salt and sunflecks
  33. Highly variable chemical signatures over short spatial distances among Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) populations
  34. Inter- and intra-annual variations in canopy fine litterfall and carbon and nitrogen inputs to the forest floor in two European coniferous forests
  35. Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration leads to increased whole‐plant isoprene emission in hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides)
  36. A screening study of leaf terpene emissions of 43 rainforest species in Danum Valley Conservation Area (Borneo) and their relationships with chemical and morphological leaf traits
  37. Diffuse Water Pollution by Anthraquinone and Azo Dyes in Environment Importantly Alters Foliage Volatiles, Carotenoids and Physiology in Wheat (Triticum aestivum)
  38. Foliar chemistry and standing folivory of early and late-successional species in a Bornean rainforest
  39. Biology, Controls and Models of Tree Volatile Organic Compound Emissions
  40. Leaf-Level Models of Constitutive and Stress-Driven Volatile Organic Compound Emissions
  41. State-of-the-Art of BVOC Research: What Do We Have and What Have We Missed? A Synthesis
  42. The Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of Volatile Messengers in Trees
  43. Quantitative patterns between plant volatile emissions induced by biotic stresses and the degree of damage
  44. Influence of nine antibiotics on key secondary metabolites and physiological characteristics in Triticum aestivum: Leaf volatiles as a promising new tool to assess toxicity
  45. Effects of nitrogen fertilization on insect pests, their parasitoids, plant diseases and volatile organic compounds in Brassica napus
  46. Scaling BVOC Emissions from Leaf to Canopy and Landscape: How Different Are Predictions Based on Contrasting Emission Algorithms?
  47. Volatile isoprenoid emissions from plastid to planet
  48. Corrigendum to ‘Mesophyll diffusion conductance to CO2: An unappreciated central player in photosynthesis’ [Plant Sci. 193–194 (2012) 70–84]
  49. Mesophyll diffusion conductance to CO2: An unappreciated central player in photosynthesis
  50. Enhanced isoprene emission capacity and altered light responsiveness in aspen grown under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration
  51. Anatomical basis of variation in mesophyll resistance in eastern Australian sclerophylls: news of a long and winding path
  52. Photosynthetic responses to radiation
  53. Whole-plant photosynthesis: potentials, limitations and physiological and structural controls
  54. Ecophysiology of photosynthesis in semi-arid environments
  55. Circadian control of global isoprene emissions
  56. Modeling the isoprene emission rate from leaves
  57. Leaf anatomical properties in relation to differences in mesophyll conductance to CO2 and photosynthesis in two related Mediterranean Abies species
  58. Seasonal variation in vertical volatile compounds air concentrations within a remote hemiboreal mixed forest
  59. Optimization of foliage photosynthetic capacity in tree canopies: towards identifying missing constraints
  60. Emissions of green leaf volatiles and terpenoids from Solanum lycopersicum are quantitatively related to the severity of cold and heat shock treatments
  61. Roles of climate and functional traits in controlling toothed vs. untoothed leaf margins
  62. Temperature responses of dark respiration in relation to leaf sugar concentration
  63. Measures of Light in Studies on Light-Driven Plant Plasticity in Artificial Environments
  64. Developmental changes in mesophyll diffusion conductance and photosynthetic capacity under different light and water availabilities in Populus tremula: how structure constrains function
  65. Fame, glory and neglect in meta-analyses
  66. Extracting and trapping biogenic volatile organic compounds stored in plant species
  67. Ecosystem-scale biosphere–atmosphere interactions of a hemiboreal mixed forest stand at Järvselja, Estonia
  68. Can the capacity for isoprene emission acclimate to environmental modifications during autumn senescence in temperate deciduous tree species Populus tremula?
  69. Seasonal variation in vertical volatile compounds air concentrations within a remote hemiboreal mixed forest
  70. Induction of a Longer Term Component of Isoprene Release in Darkened Aspen Leaves: Origin and Regulation under Different Environmental Conditions
  71. Lower P contents and more widespread terpene presence in old Bornean than in young Hawaiian tropical plant species guilds
  72. Evergreens favored by higher responsiveness to increased CO2
  73. Sensitivity of leaf size and shape to climate: global patterns and paleoclimatic applications
  74. Tree Size- and Age-Related Changes in Leaf Physiology and Their Influence on Carbon Gain
  75. Volatile Emissions from Alnus glutionosa Induced by Herbivory are Quantitatively Related to the Extent of Damage
  76. High within‐canopy variation in isoprene emission potentials in temperate trees: Implications for predicting canopy‐scale isoprene fluxes
  77. Leaf Functional Anatomy in Relation to Photosynthesis
  78. Responses of forest trees to single and multiple environmental stresses from seedlings to mature plants: Past stress history, stress interactions, tolerance and acclimation
  79. When it is too hot for photosynthesis: heat‐induced instability of photosynthesis in relation to respiratory burst, cell permeability changes and H2O2 formation
  80. Higher Allocation to Low Cost Chemical Defenses in Invasive Species of Hawaii
  81. Temperature Response of Isoprene Emission in Vivo Reflects a Combined Effect of Substrate Limitations and Isoprene Synthase Activity: A Kinetic Analysis
  82. Acclimation of photosynthetic characteristics of the moss Pleurozium schreberi to among-habitat and within-canopy light gradients
  83. The emission factor of volatile isoprenoids: stress, acclimation, and developmental responses
  84. Faster returns on ‘leaf economics’ and different biogeochemical niche in invasive compared with native plant species
  85. Measurement of volatile terpene emissions in 70 dominant vascular plant species in Hawaii: aliens emit more than natives
  86. Leaf rust induced volatile organic compounds signalling in willow during the infection
  87. Flooding induced emissions of volatile signalling compounds in three tree species with differing waterlogging tolerance
  88. A review of light interception in plant stands from leaf to canopy in different plant functional types and in species with varying shade tolerance
  89. Plant responses to heterogeneous environments: scaling from shoot modules and whole‐plant functions to ecosystem processes
  90. The emission factor of volatile isoprenoids: stress, acclimation, and developmental responses
  91. Induced BVOCs: how to bug our models?
  92. Mild versus severe stress and BVOCs: thresholds, priming and consequences
  93. Foliar Mono- and Sesquiterpene Contents in Relation to Leaf Economic Spectrum in Native and Alien Species in Oahu (Hawai’i)
  94. Modeling the temporal dynamics of monoterpene emission by isotopic labeling in Quercus ilex leaves
  95. Seasonality of monoterpene emission potentials in Quercus ilex and Pinus pinea: Implications for regional VOC emissions modeling
  96. Are species shade and drought tolerance reflected in leaf‐level structural and functional differentiation in Northern Hemisphere temperate woody flora?
  97. Evidence That Light, Carbon Dioxide, and Oxygen Dependencies of Leaf Isoprene Emission Are Driven by Energy Status in Hybrid Aspen
  98. Contrasting correlation networks between leaf structure, nitrogen and chlorophyll in herbaceous and woody canopies
  99. Process based inventory of isoprenoid emissions from European forests: model comparisons, current knowledge and uncertainties
  100. Changes in the onset of spring growth in shrubland species in response to experimental warming along a north–south gradient in Europe
  101. Meta-phenomics: Building a unified framework for interpreting plant growth responses to diverse environmental variables
  102. Preface
  103. Role of mesophyll diffusion conductance in constraining potential photosynthetic productivity in the field
  104. How is Leaf Mass per Area (LMA) affected by the environment and how does it differ among species?
  105. Importance of mesophyll diffusion conductance in estimation of plant photosynthesis in the field
  106. Process based inventory of isoprenoid emissions from European forests: model comparisons, current knowledge and uncertainties
  107. Leaf mesophyll diffusion conductance in 35 Australian sclerophylls covering a broad range of foliage structural and physiological variation
  108. Postillumination Isoprene Emission: In Vivo Measurements of Dimethylallyldiphosphate Pool Size and Isoprene Synthase Kinetics in Aspen Leaves
  109. Packing the Photosynthetic Machinery: From Leaf to Canopy
  110. Shade Tolerance, a Key Plant Feature of Complex Nature and Consequences
  111. Environmental and developmental controls on specific leaf area are little modified by leaf allometry
  112. Gardening and urban landscaping: significant players in global change
  113. Environmental Tolerance
  114. Modeling volatile isoprenoid emissions – a story with split ends
  115. Monoterpene emissions from ornamental trees in urban areas: a case study of Barcelona, Spain
  116. Foliar limonene uptake scales positively with leaf lipid content: “non‐emitting” species absorb and release monoterpenes
  117. Environmental controls over methanol emission from leaves
  118. Fossil leaf economics quantified: calibration, Eocene case study, and implications
  119. Salting-in and salting-out effects of ionic and neutral osmotica on limonene and linalool Henry’s law constants and octanol/water partition coefficients
  120. Environmental controls over methanol emission from leaves
  121. Plasticity in mesophyll volume fraction modulates light-acclimation in needle photosynthesis in two pines
  122. Major diffusion leaks of clamp‐on leaf cuvettes still unaccounted: how erroneous are the estimates of Farquhar et al. model parameters?
  123. The Architecture of Plant Crowns
  124. Photosynthesis and resource distribution through plant canopies
  125. Leaf shape and venation pattern alter the support investments within leaf lamina in temperate species: a neglected source of leaf physiological differentiation?
  126. TOLERANCE TO SHADE, DROUGHT, AND WATERLOGGING OF TEMPERATE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE TREES AND SHRUBS
  127. Structural and physiological plasticity in response to light and nutrients in five temperate deciduous woody species of contrasting shade tolerance
  128. Emissions of monoterpenes linalool and ocimene respond differently to environmental changes due to differences in physico-chemical characteristics
  129. Interacting controls by light availability and nutrient supply on biomass allocation and growth of Betula pendula and B. pubescens seedlings
  130. Leaf size modifies support biomass distribution among stems, petioles and mid‐ribs in temperate plants
  131. Complex adjustments of photosynthetic potentials and internal diffusion conductance to current and previous light availabilities and leaf age in Mediterranean evergreen species Quercus ilex
  132. The controversy over traits conferring shade‐tolerance in trees: ontogenetic changes revisited
  133. Size‐Dependent Variation in Shoot Light‐Harvesting Efficiency in Shade‐Intolerant Conifers
  134. Heat sensitivity of photosynthetic electron transport varies during the day due to changes in sugars and osmotic potential
  135. Temperature dependencies of Henry’s law constants and octanol/water partition coefficients for key plant volatile monoterpenoids
  136. Co-limitation of plant primary productivity by nitrogen and phosphorus in a species-rich wooded meadow on calcareous soils
  137. Leaf hydraulic conductance in relation to anatomical and functional traits during Populus tremula leaf ontogeny
  138. Biomass allocation and growth rates inPinus sylvestrisare interactively modified by nitrogen and phosphorus availabilities and by tree size and age
  139. Leaf internal diffusion conductance limits photosynthesis more strongly in older leaves of Mediterranean evergreen broad‐leaved species
  140. Modulation of leaf economic traits and trait relationships by climate
  141. Species differences in timing of leaf fall and foliage chemistry modify nutrient resorption efficiency in deciduous temperate forest stands
  142. Ozone induced emissions of biogenic VOC from tobacco: relationships between ozone uptake and emission of LOX products
  143. Key Plant Structural and Allocation Traits Depend on Relative Age in the Perennial Herb Pimpinella saxifraga
  144. Light-acclimation of cladode photosynthetic potentials in Casuarina glauca : trade-offs between physiological and structural investments
  145. Light capture efficiency decreases with increasing tree age and size in the southern hemisphere gymnosperm Agathis australis
  146. Constraints on light interception efficiency due to shoot architecture in broad-leaved Nothofagus species
  147. Acclimation of antioxidant pools to the light environment in a natural forest canopy
  148. Photosynthetic Acclimation to Simultaneous and Interacting Environmental Stresses Along Natural Light Gradients: Optimality and Constraints
  149. The worldwide leaf economics spectrum
  150. Adaptive adjustments to light in foliage and whole‐plant characteristics depend on relative age in the perennial herb Leontodon hispidus
  151. Physiological and physicochemical controls on foliar volatile organic compound emissions
  152. Petiole length and biomass investment in support modify light interception efficiency in dense poplar plantations
  153. Drought acclimation of two deciduous tree species of different layers in a temperate forest canopy
  154. Leaf to Landscape
  155. Leaf to Landscape
  156. Leaf to Landscape
  157. Spatial and age-dependent modifications of photosynthetic capacity in four Mediterranean oak species
  158. Leaf structure vs. nutrient relationships vary with soil conditions in temperate shrubs and trees
  159. Three-dimensional lamina architecture alters light-harvesting efficiency in Fagus: a leaf-scale analysis
  160. Controls on the emission of plant volatiles through stomata: A sensitivity analysis
  161. Controls on the emission of plant volatiles through stomata: Differential sensitivity of emission rates to stomatal closure explained
  162. Needle longevity, shoot growth and branching frequency in relation to site fertility and within-canopy light conditions in Pinus sylvestris
  163. Total foliar area and average leaf age may be more strongly associated with branching frequency than with leaf longevity in temperate conifers
  164. A model analysis of the effects of nonspecific monoterpenoid storage in leaf tissues on emission kinetics and composition in Mediterranean sclerophyllousQuercusspecies
  165. Stomatal Constraints May Affect Emission of Oxygenated Monoterpenoids from the Foliage of Pinus pinea
  166. Dependence of needle architecture and chemical composition on canopy light availability in three North American Pinus species with contrasting needle length
  167. Leaf Biomechanics and Biomass Investment in Support in Relation to Long‐Term Irradiance in Fagus
  168. Petiole mechanics, leaf inclination, morphology, and investment in support in relation to light availability in the canopy of Liriodendron tulipifera
  169. Stomatal conductance alone does not explain the decline in foliar photosynthetic rates with increasing tree age and size in Picea abies and Pinus sylvestris
  170. Modification of light-acclimation of Pinus sylvestris shoot architecture by site fertility
  171. Rate of stomatal opening, shoot hydraulic conductance and photosynthetic characteristics in relation to leaf abscisic acid concentration in six temperate deciduous trees
  172. Leaf Structural and Photosynthetic Characteristics, and Biomass Allocation to Foliage in Relation to Foliar Nitrogen Content and Tree Size in Three Betula Species
  173. A model coupling foliar monoterpene emissions to leaf photosynthetic characteristics in Mediterranean evergreen Quercus species
  174. Monoterpene emissions in relation to foliar photosynthetic and structural variables in Mediterranean evergreen Quercus species
  175. Site fertility and the morphological and photosynthetic acclimation of Pinus sylvestris needles to light
  176. Sensitivity of photosynthetic electron transport to photoinhibition in a temperate deciduous forest canopy: Photosystem II center openness, non-radiative energy dissipation and excess irradiance under field conditions
  177. GLOBAL-SCALE CLIMATIC CONTROLS OF LEAF DRY MASS PER AREA, DENSITY, AND THICKNESS IN TREES AND SHRUBS
  178. Global-Scale Climatic Controls of Leaf Dry Mass per Area, Density, and Thickness in Trees and Shrubs
  179. Responses of foliar photosynthetic electron transport, pigment stoichiometry, and stomatal conductance to interacting environmental factors in a mixed species forest canopy
  180. Research review. Components of leaf dry mass per area – thickness and density – alter leaf photosynthetic capacity in reverse directions in woody plants
  181. Variability in Leaf Morphology and Chemical Composition as a Function of Canopy Light Environment in Coexisting Deciduous Trees
  182. Apparent Controls on Leaf Conductance by Soil Water Availability and via Light‐Acclimation of Foliage Structural and Physiological Properties in a Mixed Deciduous, Temperate Forest
  183. Biomass investment in leaf lamina versus lamina support in relation to growth irradiance and leaf size in temperate deciduous trees
  184. Energy requirement for foliage formation is not constant along canopy light gradients in temperate deciduous trees
  185. Differences in chemical composition relative to functional differentiation between petioles and laminas of Fraxinus excelsior
  186. An analysis of light effects on foliar morphology, physiology, and light interception in temperate deciduous woody species of contrasting shade tolerance
  187. Stoichiometry of foliar carbon constituents varies along light gradients in temperate woody canopies: implications for foliage morphological plasticity
  188. Distribution of leaf photosynthetic properties in tree canopies: comparison of species with different shade tolerance
  189. Growth of Young Trees of Acer platanoides and Quercus robur Along a Gap- Understory Continuum: Interrelationships between Allometry, Biomass Partitioning, Nitrogen, and Shade Tolerance
  190. Adjustment of foliage structure and function to a canopy light gradient in two co-existing deciduous trees. Variability in leaf inclination angles in relation to petiole morphology
  191. Acclimation to low irradiance in Picea abies: influences of past and present light climate on foliage structure and function
  192. Energy requirement for foliage construction depends on tree size inyoung Picea abies trees
  193. Role of foliar nitrogen in light harvesting and shade tolerance of four temperate deciduous woody species
  194. Distribution patterns of foliar carbon and nitrogen as affected by tree dimensions and relative light conditions in the canopy of Picea abies
  195. Energy requirement for foliage construction depends on tree size in
  196. Distribution patterns of foliar carbon and nitrogen as affected by tree dimensions and relative light conditions in the canopy of
  197. Changes in foliage distribution with relative irradiance and tree size: Differences between the saplings of Acer platanoides and Quercus robur
  198. Effects of light availability and tree size on the architecture of assimilative surface in the canopy of Picea abies: variation in shoot structure
  199. Effects of light availability and tree size on the architecture of assimilative surface in the canopy of Picea abies: variation in needle morphology
  200. Leaf weight per area and leaf size of 85 Estonian woody species in relation to shade tolerance and light availability
  201. Variations in leaf morphometry and nitrogen concentration in Betula pendula Roth., Corylus avellana L. and Lonicera xylosteum L.
  202. Structural determinants of leaf light-harvesting capacity and photosynthetic potentials
  203. Photosynthesis during leaf development and ageing
  204. Ecophysiology of photosynthesis in temperate forests