
doi: 10.1007/bf02414418
The rate of O2-uptake and CO2-output, at 10°C., of tubers (var.Majestic) soon after they were formed at the end of June was about 50 ml/kg/hr, and fell during development to final values, before the death of the foliage, of the order of 4–5 ml/kg/hr. The quotient CO2/O2 remained within the range 0,85–1,19. The respiration of the tubers per plant calculated for field temperature, rose from about 6–7 ml/hr at the end of June to a peak value of 25–30 ml/hr in mid-August and thereafter fell. The results given here, coupled with observations on foliage respiration, and on the effect of temperature on respiration, suggest that increased respiration plays only a minor part in the reduction in yield which is observed at high temperatures. The mechanism of this reduction is discussed.
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