Seedlings of 12 provenances of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) were exposed to ambient, non-filtered air (NF)
or NF+50 nl l−1 ozone (NF50) for 8 h d−1 in open-top chambers (OTCs), from 1 June to 4 October 1995. In 1996
exposure was continued from 31 May to 1 October at four levels: charcoal-filtered air (CF), NF, NF50 and
NF+100 nl l−1 ozone (NF100). Provenances were grown for both seasons in outside reference plots. All treatments
were replicated. Ozone did not affect gas exchange in the provenances until late in the second season. NF100
reduced photosynthesis by 18% in August 1996 compared to CF. In September, photosynthesis was reduced by
22% in NF50 and by 29% in NF100. After two seasons, ozone reduced the root:shoot ratio by 24% when
comparing CF and NF100; this was caused by reductions in the root biomass. Ozone did not affect height growth
or stem diameter, and there were no ozone×provenance interactions for any growth parameter. There was,
however, a significant ozone×provenance interaction for photosynthesis, showing northwest European
provenances to be more sensitive to ozone than southeast European provenances when comparing dose–response
estimates. This is interpreted in terms of genetic adaptation of the photosynthetic apparatus to regional growing
conditions. Seedlings in the chambers grew 45% taller, and had 28% more shoot biomass and 29% smaller root
biomass, resulting in a 44% reduction of root:shoot ratios compared to seedlings outside. Increased temperature
and decreased PAR inside the chambers relative to the outside were probably the main causes for the differences.
The magnitude of the chamber effects in OTCs raises doubts about conclusions drawn from ozone exposures in
such chambers. This and previous ozone experiments with OTCs may have reached inaccurate conclusions
concerning the size of ozone responses due to chamber effects.