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1.

Aims and background

The ability to suppress soil nitrification through the release of nitrification inhibitors from plant roots is termed ‘biological nitrification inhibition’ (BNI). Earlier, we reported that sorghum roots release higher BNI-activity when grown with NH 4 + , but not with NO 3 - as N source. Also for BNI release, rhizosphere pH of <5.0 is needed; beyond this, a negative effect on BNI release was observed with nearly 80% loss of BNI activity at pH >7.0. This study is aimed at understanding the inter-functional relationships associated with NH 4 + uptake, rhizosphere-pH and plasma membrane H+-ATPase (PM H+-ATPase) activity in regulating the release of BNIs (biological nitrification inhibitors) from sorghum roots.

Methods

Sorghum was grown hydroponically and root exudates were collected from intact plants using a pH-stat system to separate the secondary acidification effects by NH 4 + uptake on BNIs release. A recombinant luminescent Nitrosomonas europaea bioassay was used to determine BNI-activity. Root plasma membrane was isolated using a two-phase partitioning system. Hydrolytic H+-ATPase activity was determined. Split-root system setup was deployed to understand the localized responses to NH 4 + , H+-ATPase-stimulator (fusicoccin) or H+-ATPase-inhibitor (vanadates) on BNI release by sorghum.

Results

Presence of NH 4 + in the rhizosphere stimulated the expression of H+-ATPase activity and enhanced the release of BNIs from sorghum roots. Fusicoccin, which stimulates H+-ATPase activity, also stimulated BNIs release in the absence of NH 4 + ; vanadate, which suppresses H+-ATPase activity, also suppressed the release of BNIs. NH 4 + levels (in rhizosphere) positively influenced BNIs release and root H+-ATPase activity in the concentration range of 0-1.0 mM, indicating a close relationship between BNI release and root H+-ATPase activity with a possible involvement of carrier-mediated transport for the release of BNIs in sorghum.

Conclusion

Our results suggest that NH 4 + uptake, PM H+-ATPase activity, and rhizosphere acidification are functionally inter-connected with BNI release in sorghum. Such knowledge is critical to gain insights into why BNI function is more effective in light-textured, mildly acidic soils compared to other soil types.  相似文献   

2.
The tropical pasture grass, Brachiaria humidicola (Rendle) Schweick, produces nitrification inhibitory compounds (termed biological nitrification inhibitors or BNIs) in its shoot and root tissues and releases BNIs from its roots. In the present study, two BNI compounds were isolated and identified from the shoot tissue of B. humidicola using activity-guided fractionation. The recombinant Nitrosomonas europaea containing luxAB genes derived from the bioluminescent marine gram-negative bacterium Vibrio harveyi, were used to determine BNI activity. The BNI compounds in the shoot tissue were identified as linoleic acid (LA) and linolenic acid (LN) using authentic-chemicals obtained from ©Sigma (ED80 16.0 μg ml?1 for both LA and LN) for verification. None of the other tested free fatty acids namely stearic acid, oleic acid, arachidonic acid, and cis-vaccenic acid showed any inhibitory effect on nitrification. Among the fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) evaluated [methyl oleate, methyl linoleate (LA-ME) and methyl linoleneate (LN-ME)], only LA-ME showed an inhibitory effect (ED80 8.0 μg ml?1). The inhibitory effect of LA, LN and LA-ME in the soil was stable for 120 days at 20°C. Soil treated with LA, LN and LA-ME showed a very low accumulation of NO3 ? and the maintenance of soil inorganic N in the NH4 + form. The inhibitory effect of LA-ME on soil nitrification was greater than that of LA or LN. In addition to BNI activity, both LA and LA-ME showed a suppressive effect on urea hydrolysis in soil. Both LA and LN blocked the AMO (ammonia monooxygenase) and HAO (hydroxylamino oxidoreductase) enzymatic pathways in Nitrosomonas. Since LA and LN can be produced from vegetable oils such as soybean, flax or sunflower, they have the potential for use as nitrification inhibitors in production agriculture.  相似文献   

3.

Aim

A simple, rapid, colourimetric method for screening biological nitrification inhibitors in plants is presented.

Methods

Our approach combines the use of the Griess assay to track the rate of nitrite (NO2 ?) production by pure cultures of ammonia oxidising bacteria in the presence and absence of nitrification inhibitors with a simple method for collecting root exudates from plants. NO2 ? formation was tracked colourimetically on a microplate reader over 9 h of incubation. The advantage of this method is that it provides a simple, high throughput means of measuring biological nitrification inhibition in root exudates, using wild-type bacterial cultures.

Results

NO2 ? formation rates and inhibition levels measured using the high through-put method were highly correlated with those measured by tracking NO2 ? formation using a segmented flow analyser. The method was able to quantify inhibition of Nitrosomonas europaea by the synthetic nitrification inhibitors allythiourea (AT), dicyandiamide (DCD) and 3,4,-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) with IC50 values similar to those reported in the literature. The method detected biological nitrification inhibition (BNI) in root exudates from Brachiaria humidicola and the lack of BNI in root exudates from wheat cv. Janz with minimal alteration of the exudates prior to testing. The results also showed that the more common soil ammonia oxidising bacterium (AOB), Nitrosospira multiformis, was much less sensitive to AT and DCD than N. europaea but had similar sensitivity to DMPP.

Conclusions

This method provides a potentially useful way of screening large numbers of root exudate samples allowing for phenotyping of the BNI trait in crop and pasture populations which will be required for the trait to be introduced into commercial varieties.
  相似文献   

4.
Selenium is an essential chemopreventive antioxidant element to oxidative stress, although high concentrations of selenium induce toxic and oxidative effects on the human body. However, the mechanisms behind these effects remain elusive. We investigated toxic effects of different selenium concentrations in human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 cells by evaluating Ca2+ mobilization, cell viability and caspase-3 and -9 activities at different sample times. We found the toxic concentration and toxic time of H2O2 as 100 μm and 10 h on cell viability in the cells using four different concentrations of H2O2 (1 μm–1 mm) and six different incubation times (30 min, 1, 2, 5, 10, 24 h). Then, we found the therapeutic concentration of selenium to be 200 nm by cells incubated in eight different concentrations of selenium (10 nm–1 mm) for 1 h. We measured Ca2+ release, cell viability and caspase-3 and -9 activities in cells incubated with high and low selenium concentrations at 30 min and 1, 2, 5, 10 and 24 h. Selenium (200 nm) elicited mild endoplasmic reticulum stress and mediated cell survival by modulating Ca2+ release, the caspases and cell apoptosis, whereas selenium concentrations as high as 1 mm induced severe endoplasmic reticulum stress and caused cell death by activating modulating Ca2+ release, the caspases and cell apoptosis. In conclusion, these results explained the molecular mechanisms of the chemoprotective effect of different concentrations of selenium on oxidative stress-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

5.

Aims

It has been reported that root exudates of Sorghum bicolor can inhibit nitrification in a bioassay using Nitrosomonas, and methyl 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl) propionate (MHPP) was identified as one of the nitrification inhibiting compounds. Therefore, we have investigated the effects of this compound on nitrogen dynamic, potential nitrification activity and on soil microorganisms.

Methods

We conducted soil incubation experiments using synthetic MHPP to evaluate its effect on changes in inorganic soil nitrogen pools, on nitrification activity and on abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea. Addition of MHPP at two concentrations equivalent to 70 and 350 μg C g?1 soil was compared to glucose as a carbon source and to the commercially available nitrification inhibitor dicyandiamide (DCD).

Results

Soil amended with the high dose of MHPP and with DCD showed reduced nitrate content and low nitrification activity after 3 and 7 days of incubation. This was mirrored by a 70 % reduction in potential nitrification activity compared to a nitrogen-only control. None of the incubation treatments affected non-target microbial counts as estimated by 16S rRNA gene copy numbers, however, the high dose of MHPP significantly reduced the abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea.

Conclusions

These findings suggest that MHPP is capable of suppressing nitrification in soil, possibly by reducing the population size and activity of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms.  相似文献   

6.

Background

Agriculture is the single largest geo-engineering initiative that humans have initiated on planet Earth, largely through the introduction of unprecedented amounts of reactive nitrogen (N) into ecosystems. A major portion of this reactive N applied as fertilizer leaks into the environment in massive amounts, with cascading negative effects on ecosystem health and function. Natural ecosystems utilize many of the multiple pathways in the N cycle to regulate N flow. In contrast, the massive amounts of N currently applied to agricultural systems cycle primarily through the nitrification pathway, a single inefficient route that channels much of this reactive N into the environment. This is largely due to the rapid nitrifying soil environment of present-day agricultural systems.

Scope

In this Viewpoint paper, the importance of regulating nitrification as a strategy to minimize N leakage and to improve N-use efficiency (NUE) in agricultural systems is highlighted. The ability to suppress soil nitrification by the release of nitrification inhibitors from plant roots is termed ‘biological nitrification inhibition’ (BNI), an active plant-mediated natural function that can limit the amount of N cycling via the nitrification pathway. The development of a bioassay using luminescent Nitrosomonas to quantify nitrification inhibitory activity from roots has facilitated the characterization of BNI function. Release of BNIs from roots is a tightly regulated physiological process, with extensive genetic variability found in selected crops and pasture grasses. Here, the current status of understanding of the BNI function is reviewed using Brachiaria forage grasses, wheat and sorghum to illustrate how BNI function can be utilized for achieving low-nitrifying agricultural systems. A fundamental shift towards ammonium (NH4+)-dominated agricultural systems could be achieved by using crops and pastures with high BNI capacities. When viewed from an agricultural and environmental perspective, the BNI function in plants could potentially have a large influence on biogeochemical cycling and closure of the N loop in crop–livestock systems.  相似文献   

7.

Key Message

The critical level for SO 2 susceptibility of Populus × canescens is approximately 1.2 μL L ?1 SO 2 . Both sulfite oxidation and sulfite reduction and assimilation contribute to SO 2 detoxification.

Abstract

In the present study, uptake, susceptibility and metabolism of SO2 were analyzed in the deciduous tree species poplar (Populus × canescens). A particular focus was on the significance of sulfite oxidase (SO) for sulfite detoxification, as SO has been characterized as a safety valve for SO2 detoxification in herbaceous plants. For this purpose, poplar plants were exposed to different levels of SO2 (0.65, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2 μL L?1) and were characterized by visible injuries and at the physiological level. Gas exchange parameters (stomatal conductance for water vapor, CO2 assimilation, SO2 uptake) of the shoots were compared with metabolite levels (sulfate, thiols) and enzyme activities [SO, adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate reductase (APR)] in expanding leaves (80–90 % expanded). The critical dosage of SO2 that confers injury to the leaves was 1.2 μL L?1 SO2. The observed increase in sulfur containing compounds (sulfate and thiols) in the expanding leaves strongly correlated with total SO2 uptake of the plant shoot, whereas SO2 uptake rate was strongly correlated with stomatal conductance for water vapor. Furthermore, exposure to high concentration of SO2 revealed channeling of sulfite through assimilatory sulfate reduction that contributes in addition to SO-mediated sulfite oxidation to sulfite detoxification in expanding leaves of this woody plant species.  相似文献   

8.

Background and Aims

Soil mineralization, nitrification, and dynamic changes in abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and archaea (AOA) were studied to validate our hypothesis that soil mineralization and nitrification decreased along the chronosequence of rice cultivation.

Methods

Paddy soils with a 300, 700 and 2000-year cultivation history (P300, P700 and P2000) were selected to study net mineralization and nitrification processes. Dynamic abundance of AOB and AOA was estimated by quantifying their respective amoA gene copies.

Results

The net mineralization rate was higher for P300 than P700 and P2000. Potential nitrification (N p ) and average nitrification rates (V a ) were similar for P300 and P700 soils, but the simulated potential nitrification rate (V p ) and nitrification rate (k1) was 72 % and 88 % higher for P300 than P700, respectively. V a was about 70 % lower than for P2000 than P300 and P700. AOB amoA gene copies were higher for P300 than P700 and P2000, whereas AOA abundance did not show significant differences. AOB abundance showed a positive response to NH4 supply but AOA did not.

Conclusions

Both N mineralization and nitrification were depressed with increased cultivation time. Archaea responded to mineralization positively rather than nitrification, which suggested that readily mineralized organic matter may play an important role in AOA.  相似文献   

9.

Background and aims

Continuous vegetable cultivation in greenhouses can easily induce soil degradation, which considerably affects the development of sustainable vegetable production. Recently, the reductive soil disinfestation (RSD) is widely used as an alternative to chemical soil disinfestations to improve degraded greenhouse vegetable soils. Considering the importance of nitrogen (N) for plant growth and environment effect, the internal N transformation processes and rates should be well investigated in degraded vegetable soils treated by RSD, but few works have been undertaken.

Methods

Three RSD-treated and three untreated degraded vegetable soils were chosen and a 15?N tracing incubation experiment differentially labeled with 15NH4NO3 or NH4 15NO3 was conducted at 25 °C under 50 % water holding capacity (WHC) for 96 h. Soil gross N transformation rates were calculated using a 15?N tracing model combined with Markov Chain Monte Carlo Metropolis algorithm (Müller et al. 2007), while the emissions of N2O and NO were also measured.

Results

RSD could significantly enhance the soil microbial NH4 + immobilization rate, the heterotrophic and autotrophic nitrification rates, and the NO3 ? turnover time. The ratio of heterotrophic nitrification to total inorganic N supply rate (mineralization + heterotrophic nitrification) increased greatly from 5.4 % in untreated vegetable soil to 56.1 % in treated vegetable soil. In addition, low release potential of NO and N2O was observed in RSD-treated vegetable soil, due to the decrease in the NO and N2O product ratios from heterotrophic and autotrophic nitrifications. These significant differences in gross N transformation rates, the supply processes and capacity of inorganic N, and the NO and N2O emissions between untreated and treated vegetable soils could be explained by the elimination of accumulated NO3 ?, increased pH, and decreased electrical conductivity (EC) caused by RSD. Noticeably, the NO3 ? consumption rates were still significantly lower than the NO3 ? production rates in RSD-treated vegetable soil.

Conclusions

Except for improving soil chemical properties, RSD could significantly alter the supply processes of inorganic N and reduce the release potential of N2O and NO in RSD-treated degraded vegetable soil. In order to retard the re-occurrence of NO3 ? accumulation, acidification and salinization and to promote the long-term productivity of greenhouse vegetable fields, the rational use of N fertilizer should be paid great attention to farmers in vegetable cultivation.  相似文献   

10.

Background and aims

Changes in soil moisture availability seasonally and as a result of climatic variability would influence soil nitrogen (N) cycling in different land use systems. This study aimed to understand mechanisms of soil moisture availability on gross N transformation rates.

Methods

A laboratory incubation experiment was conducted to evaluate the effects of soil moisture content (65 vs. 100% water holding capacity, WHC) on gross N transformation rates using the 15N tracing technique (calculated by the numerical model FLUAZ) in adjacent grassland and forest soils in central Alberta, Canada.

Results

Gross N mineralization and gross NH 4 + immobilization rates were not influenced by soil moisture content for both soils. Gross nitrification rates were greater at 100 than at 65% WHC only in the forest soil. Denitrification rates during the 9 days of incubation were 2.47 and 4.91 mg N kg-1 soil d-1 in the grassland and forest soils, respectively, at 100% WHC, but were not different from zero at 65% WHC. In the forest soil, both the ratio of gross nitrification to gross NH 4 + immobilization rates (N/IA) and cumulative N2O emission were lower in the 65 than in the 100% WHC treatment, while in the grassland soil, the N/IA ratio was similar between the two soil moisture content treatments but cumulative N2O emission was lower at 65% WHC.

Conclusions

The effect of soil moisture content on gross nitrification rates differ between forest and grassland soils and decreasing soil moisture content from 100 to 65% WHC reduced N2O emissions in both soils.  相似文献   

11.

Aims and background

Release of ‘non-exchangeable’ potassium (K) from interlayers of illite is diffusion-controlled and has been shown to depend on the solution concentration of K and other cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, NH4 +).

Methods

We analysed changes in soil solution concentrations of K and competing cations in situ at different distances from the root surface over time and related them to the transformation of illite, as revealed by X-ray diffraction, and chemical measures of differently bound K.

Results and Conclusions

Within 49 and 98 days, respectively, 6.4 and 14.4 % of the illite’s total K was released upon contact with the root system. Mixed layered minerals increased from 33 (0 d) to 35 (49 d) to 40 % (98 d). Release of K from interlayers and the transformation of illite occurred at soil solution K concentrations close to the threshold of 80 μM suggested earlier. Concentrations of Ca and Mg increased with decreasing distance from the root surface, promoting the release of K. The NaBPh4 method supposed to determine ‘non-exchangeable’ K extracted only 1/3 of the total K from illite.  相似文献   

12.

Aims

A 3-year field experiment (October 2004–October 2007) was conducted to quantify N2O fluxes and determine the regulating factors from rain-fed, N fertilized wheat-maize rotation in the Sichuan Basin, China.

Methods

Static chamber-GC techniques were used to measure soil N2O fluxes in three treatments (three replicates per treatment): CK (no fertilizer); N150 (300 kg N fertilizer ha?1 yr?1 or 150 kg N?ha?1 per crop); N250 (500 kg N fertilizer ha?1 yr?1 kg or 250 kg N?ha?1 per crop). Nitrate (NO 3 ? ) leaching losses were measured at nearby sites using free-drained lysimeters.

Results

The annual N2O fluxes from the N fertilized treatments were in the range of 1.9 to 6.7 kg N?ha?1 yr?1 corresponding to an N2O emission factor ranging from 0.12 % to 1.06 % (mean value: 0.61 %). The relationship between monthly soil N2O fluxes and NO 3 - leaching losses can be described by a significant exponential decaying function.

Conclusions

The N2O emission factor obtained in our study was somewhat lower than the current IPCC default emission factor (1 %). Nitrate leaching, through removal of topsoil NO 3 ? , is an underrated regulating factor of soil N2O fluxes from cropland, especially in the regions where high NO 3 - leaching losses occur.  相似文献   

13.

Background and Aims

Understanding crop responses to increasing atmospheric CO2 requires knowledge of how their root systems grow, proliferate and function. The effect of elevated CO2 on the growth and proliferation of wheat root system (Triticum aestivum L.), was examined.

Methods

Two pairs of sister lines of wheat contrasting in vigour (CV97 and CV207) and tillering (7750N and 7750PF) were grown in rhizo-boxes under ambient (380 μl L?1) and elevated CO2 (700 μl L?1), and the root growth and proliferation mapped.

Results

Elevated CO2 effects on shoot and root biomass were observed in the lines contrasting for vigour, but not in the lines contrasting for tillering. Root biomass was reduced by 67 % in the high vigour line CV97, reducing total plant biomass by 26 % compared to the low vigour line, CV207. This was due to a reduction in root length down the 1 m soil profile and root proliferation in the top 0.2 m layer. The reduction in root biomass was not compensated by an increase in shoot biomass.

Conclusions

The reduction in root biomass under elevated CO2 in the vigour line CV97 can be explained through its inability to increase the sink strength due to the failure to increase tiller number to which the plant presumably responded by increasing losses of the newly assimilated carbon by respiration.  相似文献   

14.
Using a recombinant luminescent Nitrosomonas europaea assay to quantify biological nitrification inhibition (BNI), we found that a wild relative of wheat (Leymus racemosus (Lam.) Tzvelev) had a high BNI capacity and releases about 20 times more BNI compounds (about 30 ATU g−1 root dry weight 24 h−1) than Triticum aestivum L. (cultivated wheat). The root exudate from cultivated wheat has no inhibitory effect on nitrification when applied to soil; however, the root exudate from L. racemous suppressed formation and kept more than 90% of the soil’s inorganic-N in the -form for 60 days. The high-BNI capacity of L. racemosus is mostly associated with chromosome Lr#n. Two other chromosomes Lr#J, and Lr#I also have an influence on BNI production. Tolerance of L. racemosus to is controlled by chromosome 7Lr#1-1. Sustained release of BNI compounds occurred only in the presence of in the root environment. Given the level of BNI production expressed in DALr#n and assuming normal plant growth, we estimated that nearly 87,500,000 ATU of BNI activity ha−1 day−1 could be released in a field of vigorously growing wheat; this amounts to the equivalent of the inhibitory effect from the application of 52.5 g of the synthetic nitrification inhibitor nitrapyrin (one AT unit of BNI activity is equivalent to 0.6 μg of nitrapyrin). At this rate of BNI production it would take only 19 days for a BNI-enabled wheat crop to produce the inhibitory power of a standard commercial application of nitrapyrin, 1 kg ha−1. The synthetic nitrification inhibitor, dicyandiamide, blocked specifically the AMO (ammonia monooxygenase) pathway, while the BNI from L. racemosus blocked the HAO (hydroxylamine oxidoreductase) pathway in Nitrosomonas. Here we report the first finding of high production of BNI in a wild relative of any cereal and its successful introduction and expression in cultivated wheat. These results demonstrate the potential for empowering the new generation of wheat cultivars with high-BNI capacity to control nitrification in wheat-production systems. Responsible Editor: Hans Lambers.  相似文献   

15.

Aims

Reintroductions of coarse woody debris (CWD) to Australia’s temperate eucalypt woodlands have been proposed to address the paucity of CWD in these landscapes. This study aimed to quantify the effects of CWD on surface soils.

Methods

Values of C, N, C:N, P, NO3 ?, NH4 +, pH and electrical conductivity (EC) were measured adjacent to, and at reference distances from CWD. Soils were measured at depths of 0–1 cm, 1–3 cm and 3–5 cm for 12 individual CWD samples of varying decay classes and diameters. A linear mixed model was used to test the effects of the presence of CWD, soil depth and CWD decay class and diameter.

Results

Significantly larger values for C, N, C:N, P, NO3 ?, EC, and significantly smaller values for pH were found adjacent to CWD. The greatest impact of CWD was on the upper most surface soil. CWD decay class and diameter had little influence on the measured soil characteristics.

Conclusion

This is the first quantitative determination of the effects of eucalypt CWD on woodland soils in Australia. The effect of added CWD is rapid, occurring after just 2 years. The results suggest that the effects are due to the structural properties of CWD.  相似文献   

16.
Microorganism with simultaneous nitrification and denitrification ability plays a significant role in nitrogen removal process, especially in the eutrophic waters with excessive nitrogen loads. The nitrogen removal capacity of microorganism may suffer from low temperature or nitrite nitrogen source. In this study, a hypothermia aerobic nitrite-denitrifying bacterium, Pseudomonas tolaasii strain Y-11, was selected to determine the simultaneous nitrification and denitrification ability with mixed nitrogen source at 15 °C. The sole nitrogen removal efficiencies of strain Y-11 in simulated wastewater were obtained. After 24 h of incubation at 15 °C, the ammonium nitrogen fell below the detection limit from an initial value of 10.99 mg/L. Approximately 88.0 ± 0.33% of nitrate nitrogen was removed with the initial concentration of 11.78 mg/L and the nitrite nitrogen was not detected with the initial concentration of 10.75 mg/L after 48 h of incubation at 15 °C. Additionally, the simultaneous nitrification and denitrification nitrogen removal ability of P. tolaasii strain Y-11 was evaluated using low concentration of mixed NH4+-N and NO3?–N/NO2?–N (about 5 mg/L-N each) and high concentration of mixed NH4+–N and NO3?–N/NO2?–N (about 100 mg/L-N each). There was no nitrite nitrogen accumulation at the time of evaluation. The results demonstrated that P. tolaasii strain Y-11 had higher simultaneous nitrification and denitrification capacity with low concentration of mixed inorganic nitrogen sources and may be applied in low temperature wastewater treatment.  相似文献   

17.
18.

Aims

This study examined the effect of elevated CO2 on plant growth, root morphology and Cd accumulation in S. alfredii, and assessed the possibility of using elevated CO2 as fertilizer to enhance phytoremediation efficiency of Cd-contaminated soil by S. alfredii.

Methods

Both soil pot culture and hydroponic experiments were carried out to characterize plant biomass, root morphological parameters, and cadmium uptake in S. alfredii grown under ambient (350 μL L?1) or elevated (800 μL L?1) CO2.

Results

Elevated CO2 prompted the growth of S. alfredii, shoot and root biomass were increased by 24.6–36.7% and 35.0–52.1%, respectively, as compared with plants grown in ambient CO2. After 10 days growth in medium containing 50 μM Cd under elevated CO2, the development of lateral roots and root hairs were stimulated, additionally, root length, surface area, root volume and tip number were increased significantly, especially for the finest diameter roots. The total Cd uptake per pot was significantly greater under elevated CO2 than under ambient CO2. After 60 d growth, Cd phytoextraction efficiency was increased significantly in the elevated CO2 treatment.

Conclusions

Results suggested that the use of elevated CO2 may be a useful way to improve phytoremediation efficiency of Cd-contaminated soil by S. alfredii.  相似文献   

19.

Background and aims

The potential use of a metal-tolerant sunflower mutant line for both biomonitoring and phytoremediating a Cu-contaminated soil series was investigated.

Methods

The soil series (21–1,170 mg Cu kg?1) was sampled in field plots at control and wood preservation sites. Sunflowers were cultivated 1 month in potted soils under controlled conditions.

Results

pH and dissolved organic matter influenced Cu concentration in the soil pore water. Leaf chlorophyll content and root growth decreased as Cu exposure rose. Their EC10 values corresponded to 104 and 118 μg Cu L?1 in the soil pore water, 138 and 155 mg Cu kg?1 for total soil Cu, and 16–18 mg Cu kg?1 DW shoot. Biomass of plant organs as well as leaf area, length and asymmetry were well correlated with Cu exposure, contrary to the maximum stem height and leaf water content.

Conclusions

Physiological parameters were more sensitive to soil Cu exposure than the morphological ones. Bioconcentration and translocation factors and distribution of mineral masses for Cu highlighted this mutant as a secondary Cu accumulator. Free Cu2+ concentration in soil pore water best predicted Cu phytoavailability. The usefulness of this sunflower mutant line for biomonitoring and Cu phytoextraction was discussed.  相似文献   

20.

Aims

This study evaluated how iron nutrition affect leaf anatomical and photosynthetic responses to low cadmium and its accumulation in peanut plants.

Methods

Seedlings were treated with Cd (0 and 0.2 μM CdCl2) and Fe (0, 10, 25, 50 or 100 μM EDTA-Na2Fe) in hydroponic culture.

Results

Cadmium accumulation is highest in Fe-deficient plants, and dramatically decreased with increasing Fe supply. The biomass, gas exchange, and reflectance indices were highest at 25 μM Fe2+ treatments, indicating the concentration is favorable for the growth of peanut plants. Both Fe deficiency and Cd exposure impair photosynthesis and reduce reflectance indices. However, they show different effects on leaf anatomical traits. Fe deficiency induces more and smaller stomata in the leaf surface, but does not affect the inner structure. Low Cd results in a thicker lamina with smaller stomata, thicker palisade and spongy tissues, and lower palisade to spongy thickness ratio. The stomatal length and length/width ratio in the upper epidermis, spongy tissue thickness, and palisade to spongy thickness ratio were closely correlated with net photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, and transpiration rate.

Conclusions

Cd accumulation rather than Fe deficiency alters leaf anatomy that may increase water use efficiency but inhibit photosynthesis.  相似文献   

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