Environmental preconditioning has an important effect on the response of plants to ozone and other oxidants present in photochemical smog (2,4,6,7,9). Ozone injury to plants decreased after a 48-hour prefumigation dark period; no injury occurred when the dark period was extended to 72 hours (4,9). Plants grown at 21.5 Klux were less sensitive to ozone than plants grown at 8.5 Klux. In contrast, plant damage from the photochemically produced phytotoxicant, peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN), responded quite differently to photoperiod and light intensity (4,9). Temperature affected the response of plants to smog and synthetic oxidants. Plants were less smog-sensitive when grown at cool than at warm temperatures (2, 6, 7).The tobacco leaf spot weather fleck has been shown to be caused by photochemically produced ozone since injury often follows elevated ozone levels, and symptoms of natural and experimental injury are virtually indistinguishable (5,8 Chamber temperature was maintained at 26 to 280 and relative humidity ranged between 80 and 90 %. Ozone was generated electrolytically by passing compressed tank oxygen through dual, corona-type, silent discharge ozonizers.For each fumigation, the various preconditioning treatments were imposed on 4 plants of each variety. The plants were selected for uniform size and vigor from the bulk greenhouse supply. Two methods were used to investigate the preconditioning effects of extended light and extended darkness. Plants were subjected to a combined natural-artificial illumination photoperiod during the 27-hour period before fumigation. Plants exposed to 14-, 42-, and 66-hour dark periods were used to study the effects of extended prefumigation darkness on ozone susceptibility.The lighting cycle for extended light preconditioning was 22 hours of light, 2 hours of dark, and 3 hours of light; for the dark control the cycle was 10 hours of light, 14 hours of dark, and 3 hours of light. All plants were placed in the fumigation chamber for the final hour before fumigation. The 27-hour cycle began at 6 AM and continued under natural illumination until 4 PM. The light-preconditioned plants then were