Authors
S Tiwari, Marshall Agrawal, FM Marshall
Publication date
2006/8
Journal
Environmental monitoring and assessment
Volume
119
Pages
15-30
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Description
The present experiment was done to evaluate the impact of ambient air pollution on carrot (Dacus carotavar. Pusa Kesar) plants using open top chambers (OTCs) ventilated with ambient (NFCs) or charcoal filtered air (FCs) at a suburban site of Varanasi, India. Various morphological, physiological and biochemical characteristics of the plants were studied at different growth stages. Air monitoring data clearly showed high concentrations of SO2, NO2and O3in the ambient air of study site. SO2and NO2concentrations were higher during early growth stages of carrot, whereas O3concentration was highest during later growth stages. Filtration of air has caused significant reductions in all the three pollutant concentrations in FCs as compared to NFCs.Plants growing in FCs showed significantly higher photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, water use efficiency and variable fluorescence as compared to plants …
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