首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Exploitation of localized phosphorus-patches by common bean roots   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
S. Snapp  R. Koide  J. Lynch 《Plant and Soil》1995,177(2):211-218
Phosphorus (P) uptake from patches was investigated in high-P and low-P common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) plants using a split-root system. A P-patch was developed by exposing a small sub-section of the root system to localized P enrichment. A soil-based media was used to provide realistically low, buffered levels of P. In addition, nutrient solution provided zero and 1 mM P to low-P and high-P plants, respectively. Overall, growth of low-P plants was approximately 40% that of high-P plants. Mycorrhizal infection by G. etunicatum had little detectable influence on plant growth. Root length exploring a P-patch was comparable for low-P and high-P plants, yet low-P plants allocated half as much root biomass and P to a P-patch compared to high-P plants. This was achieved by an increase in the investment in fine, terminal roots exploring a P-patch in low-P plants. P uptake per investment of dry weight in the P-patch was over 50% higher for high-P plants compared to low-P plants. The higher P-uptake efficiency in high-P plants was achieved despite the greater production of fine roots in low-P plants.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated in situ the temporal patterns and spatial extent of organic acid anion exudation into the rhizosphere solution of Lupinus albus, and its relation with the nutrient anions phosphate, nitrate and sulfate by means of a rhizobox micro suction cup method under P sufficient conditions. We compared the soil solution in the rhizosphere of cluster roots with that in the vicinity of normal roots, nodules and bulk soil. Compared to the other rhizosphere and soil compartments, concentrations of organic acid anions were higher in the vicinity of cluster roots during the exudative burst (citrate, oxalate) and nodules (acetate, malate), while concentrations of inorganic nutrient anions were highest in the bulk soil. Both active cluster roots and nodules were most efficient in taking up nitrate and phosphate. The intensity of citrate exudation by cluster roots was highly variable. The overall temporal patterns during the lifetime of cluster roots were overlaid by a diurnal pattern, i.e. in most cases, the exudation burst consisted of one or more peaks occurring in the afternoon. Multiple exudation peaks occurred daily or were separated by 1 or 2 days. Although citrate concentrations decreased with distance from the cluster root apex, they were still significantly higher at a distance of 6 to 10 mm than in the bulk soil. Phosphate concentrations were extremely variable in the proximity of cluster roots. While our results indicate that under P sufficient conditions cluster roots take up phosphate during their entire life time, the influence of citrate exudation on phosphate mobilization from soil could not be assessed conclusively because of the complex interactions between P uptake, organic acid anion exudation and P mobilization. However, we observed indications of P mobilization concurrent with the highest measured citrate concentrations. In conclusion, this study provides semiquantitative in situ data on the reactivity of different root segments of L. albus L. in terms of root exudation and nutrient uptake under nutrient sufficient conditions, in particular on the temporal variability during the lifetime of cluster roots.  相似文献   

3.
Shen  J.  Rengel  Z.  Tang  C.  Zhang  F. 《Plant and Soil》2003,248(1-2):199-206
The present study examined the effect of phosphorus (P) limitation on cluster root formation and exudation of carboxylates by N2-fixing white lupin (Lupinus albus L. cv. Kiev) grown in a P-deficient sandy soil. Plants received 10 (limited P) or 200 g P g–1 soil as FePO4 (adequate P) and were grown in a phytotron at 20/12 °C (12/12 h) for 76 days in soil columns. Cluster root formation was assessed and root exudates were collected at 9-day intervals. Shoot and root dry weights were higher in plants grown in the adequate-P compared to the limited-P treatment for 67 days. No clear difference in the total root length was observed between two P treatments before day 58. However, the specific root length increased rapidly from 17 m g–1 DW at day 40 to 28 m g–1 at day 49 in the P-limited plants, but decreased in the P-adequate plants. The effect of P limitation on enhancement of cluster root formation was observed from day 40 and reached the maximum at day 58. The number of cluster roots was negatively correlated with the P concentration in both roots and shoots. Phosphorus limitation increased exudation of citrate from day 40. The exudation of citrate displayed a cyclic pattern throughout the experiment, and appeared related to internal P concentration in plants, particularly P concentration in shoots. The sorption of exogenously added citrate in the soil was also examined. The amount of extractable citrate remained unchanged for 2 h, but decreased thereafter, suggesting that the soil had a low capacity to sorb citrate, and the rate of its decomposition by microorganisms was slow. Collecting solution leached through a soil column is a simple and reliable method to acquire root exudates from white lupin grown in soil. The results suggest that formation of cluster roots and exudation of citrate in white lupin are regulated by P concentration in shoots.  相似文献   

4.
The present study was carried out to investigate whether the P concentration in the roots or the shoots controls the growth and citrate exudation of cluster roots in white lupin (Lupinus albus L). Foliar P application indicated that low P concentration in the shoots enhanced cluster‐root growth and citrate‐exudation rate more so than low P concentration in the roots. In the split‐root study, the P concentration in the shoots increased with increased P supply (1, 25 or 75 mmol m?3 P), to the ‘privileged’ root halves. Roots ‘deprived’ of P invariably had the same low P concentrations, whereas those in the ‘privileged’ roots increased with increasing P supply (1, 25 or 75 mmol m?3 P). Nevertheless, the proportion of the total root mass allocated to cluster roots, and the citrate‐exudation rates from the root halves were always similar on both root halves, irrespective of P supply, and decreased with increasing shoot P concentrations. Peak citrate exudation rates from developing cluster roots were significantly faster from cluster roots on the ‘deprived’ root halves when the ‘privileged’ half was exposed to 1 mmol m?3 P as compared with 25 or 75 mmol m?3 P. The possibility that changes in the concentrations of P fractions in the root halves influenced cluster‐root growth and citrate exudation was discounted, because there were no significant differences in insoluble organic P, ester‐P and inorganic P among all ‘deprived’ root halves. The results indicate that cluster‐root proportions and citrate exudation rates were regulated systemically by the P status of the shoot, and that P concentrations in the roots had little influence on growth and citrate exudation of cluster roots in L. albus.  相似文献   

5.
A split-root system was used to investigate whether the external or internal P concentration controls root cluster formation and citrate exudation in white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) grown under controlled conditions. In spite of low P concentrations in the shoots and roots of the -P plant, its dry weight was not reduced compared with the P plant. Supplying external P (0.25 mmol/L) to one root half resulted in an increase in P concentration not only in the shoot, but also in the P-deprived root half, indicating P cycling within the plants. Omitting P from both split-root pots stimulated root cluster formation in both root halves,whereas P supply to one root half stimulated root cluster formation at the beginning of the treatment. Neither P supply to just one root half continuously nor resupply of P to one root half after 19 d of P starvation inhibited root cluster formation on the P-deprived side, although the concentration of P in this root half and shoot increased markedly. The results indicate that root cluster formation in L. albus is controlled by both shoot and root P concentrations. The rates of citrate exudation by both root halves with P deficiency were higher than those of the one root half supplied with P only. In the treatment with one root half supplied with P, the rates of citrate exudation by either the P-supplied or -deprived root halves were almost the same,regardless of P concentration in the roots. The results suggest that internal P concentration controls root cluster formation and citrate exudation in white lupin, but these processes may be regulated by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
A split-root system was used to investigate whether the external or internal P concentration controls root cluster formation and citrate exudation in white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) grown under controlled conditions. In spite of low P concentrations in the shoots and roots of the -P plant, its dry weight was not reduced compared with the P plant. Supplying external P (0.25 mmol/L) to one root halfresulted in an increase in P concentration not only in the shoot, but also in the P-deprived root half, indicating P cycling within the plants. Omitting P from both split-root pots stimulated root cluster formation in both root halves,whereas P supply to one root halfstimulated root cluster formation at the beginning of the treatment. Neither P supply to just one root half continuously nor resupply of P to one root half after 19 d of P starvation inhibited root cluster formation on the P-deprived side, although the concentration of P in this root half and shoot increased markedly. The results indicate that root cluster formation in L. albus is controlled by both shoot and root P concentrations. The rates of citrate exudation by both root halves with P deficiency were higher than those of the one root half supplied with P only. In the treatment with one root half supplied with P, the rates of citrate exudation by either the P-supplied or -deprived root halves were almost the same,regardless of P concentration in the roots. The results suggest that internal P concentration controls root cluster formation and citrate exudation in white lupin, but these processes may be regulated by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
de Bakker  N.V.J.  Hemminga  M. A.  Van Soelen  J. 《Plant and Soil》1999,215(1):19-27
Incorporation of cover crops into cropping systems may contribute to a more efficient utilization of soil and fertilizer P by less P-efficient crops through exudation of P-mobilizing compounds by the roots of P-efficient plant species. The main objective of the present work was to test this hypothesis. First a method has been developed which allows the quantification of organic anion exudation from individual cluster roots formed by P-deficient white lupin (Lupinus albus L.). Lupin plants were grown in nutrient solution at 1 μM P and in a low P loess in small rhizotrons. Organic anions exuded from intact plants grown in nutrient solution were collected from individual cluster roots and root tips sealed in small compartments by an anion-exchange resin placed in nylon bags (resin-bags). Succinate was the dominant organic anion exuded followed by citrate and malate. The mean of citrate exudation-rate was 0.06 pmol mm−1 s−1 with exudation highly dependent on the citrate concentration and on the age of the cluster roots. Exudates from cluster roots and root tips grown at the soil surface (rhizotron-grown plants) were collected using overlayered resin–agar (resin mixed with agar). Citrate exudation from cluster roots was 10 times higher than that from root tips. Fractionation of P in the cluster root rhizosphere-soil indicates that white lupin can mobilize P not only from the available and acid-soluble P, but also from the stable residual soil P fractions. In pot experiments with an acid luvisol derived from loess low in available P, growth of wheat was significantly improved when mixed-cropped with white lupin due to improved P uptake. Both in mixed culture and in rotation wheat could benefit from the P mobilization capacity of white lupin, supporting the hypothesis above. Nine tropical leguminous cover crops and maize were grown in a pot experiment using a luvisol from Northern Nigeria low in available P. All plant species derived most of their P from the resin and bicarbonate-extractable inorganic P. Organic P (Po) accumulated particularly in the rhizosphere of all plant species. There was a significant negative correlation between the species-specific rhizosphere acid phosphatase activity and Po accumulation. Growth and P uptake of maize grown in rotation after legumes were enhanced indicating that improved P nutrition was a contributing factor. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
Rough lemon seedlings were grown in mycorrhizal-infested or phosphorus-amended soil (25 and 300 mg P/kg) in greenhouse experiments. Plants Were inoculated with the citrus burrowing nematode, Radopholus citrophilus (0, 50, 100, or 200 nematodes per pot). Six months later, mycorrhizal plants and nonmycorrhizal, high-P plants had larger shoot and root weights than did non-mycorrhizal, low-P plants. Burrowing nematode population densities were lower in roots of mycorrhizal or nonmycorrhizal, high-P plants than in roots of nonmycorrhizal, low-P plants; however, differences in plant growth between mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal plants were not significant with respect to initial nematode inoculum densities. Phosphorus content in leaf tissue was significantly greater in mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal, high-P plants compared with nonmycorrhizal, low-P plants. Nutrient concentrations of K, Mg, and Zn were unaffected by nematode parasitism, whereas P, Ca, Fe, and Mn were less in nematode-infected plants. Enhanced growth associated with root colonization by the mycorrhizal fungus appeared to result from improved P nutrition and not antagonism between the fungus and the nematode.  相似文献   

9.
Z. Wang  J. Shen  F. Zhang 《Plant and Soil》2006,287(1-2):247-256
The study examined the interactive effect of pH and P supply on cluster-root formation, carboxylate exudation and proton release by an alkaline-tolerant lupin species (Lupinus pilosus Murr.) in nutrient solution. The plants were exposed to 1 (P1, deficient) and 50 μM P (P50, adequate) for 34 days in nutrient solution at either pH 5.6 or 7.8. Plant biomass was not influenced by pH at P1, but at P50 shoot and root dry weights were 23 and 18% higher, respectively, at pH 7.8 than at pH 5.6. There was no significant difference in plant biomass between two P treatments regardless of medium pH. Phosphorus deficiency increased significantly the number of the second-order lateral roots compared with the P50 treatment. Both total root length and specific root length of plants grown at pH 5.6 were higher than those at pH 7.8 regardless of P supply. Cluster roots were formed at P1, but cluster-root number was 2-fold higher at pH 7.8 than pH 5.6. Roots released 16 and 31% more protons at pH 5.6 and 7.8, respectively, in P1 than in P50 treatments, and the rate of proton release followed the similar pattern. At pH 5.6, citrate exudation rate was 0.39 μmol g−1 root DW h−1 at P1, but was under the detection limit at P50; at pH 7.8, it was 2.4-fold higher in P1 than in P50 plants. High pH significantly increased citrate exudation rate in comparison to pH 5.6. The uptake of anions P and S was inhibited at P1 and high pH increased cations Na, Mg and Ca uptake. The results suggested that enhanced cluster-root formation, proton release and citrate exudation may account for the mechanism of efficient P acquisition by alkaline-tolerant L. pilosus well adapted to calcareous soils. Cluster-root formation and citrate exudation in L. pilosus can be altered by medium pH and P deficiency. Phosphorus deficiency-induced proton release may be associated with the reduced anion uptake, but high pH-induced proton release may be partly attributed to increased cation uptake.  相似文献   

10.
S. Nemec  J. C. V. Vu 《Plant and Soil》1990,128(2):257-263
Sour orange (Citrus aurantium L.) grown in low-P (9–12 ppm) and high-P (420 ppm) soil inoculated with or without Glomus intraradices (G.i.), were evaluated for biomass, carbohydrates, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) activity, leaf 14CO2 incorporation, and other physiological parameters. Growth of plants in the low-P, noninoculated soil was lowest, with total dry biomass reduced up to half of the low-P, inoculum treatment. Total nonstructural carbohydrates were 40% lower in leaves of plants in the low-P, noninoculated soil, compared with the other treatments. Inoculation of the low-P soil enhanced leaf 14CO2 incorporation by 67%, total chlorophyll content by 28%, and RuBPCase activity by 42%, compared with low-P, noninoculated treatment. Improved P-use efficiency by G.i. in low-P soil was comparable to high-P nutrition in improving leaf 14CO2 incorporation and concentration of major leaf photosynthetic products that include starch and sucrose. Leaf PEPCase activity in the low-P, noninoculated treatment, however, was at least threefold higher than the other treatments, suggesting a possible alteration in organic acid metabolism in sour orange leaves as a result of P deficiency.  相似文献   

11.
Exudation of carboxylates represents one the most efficient strategies used by P-starved white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) to acquire phosphorus from sparingly soluble sources. This exudation occurs through proteoid root clusters, with citrate being the predominant organic acid released. The occasional detection of malate in whole root exudates suggests that this acid would also be released, but from tissues other than root clusters. To investigate the spatial and temporal pattern of exudation, citrate and malate exudation and concentration were measured in whole roots and root sections of white lupin, from seedling emergence to plant senescence due to P starvation. Both organic acids were detected in whole root exudates of P-stressed plants, and they were released at similar rates throughout the experiment. Malate was predominantly exuded from apices of both seedling taproots and proteoid roots, whereas citrate exudation was restricted to proteoid root clusters. Studies directed to address the association between carboxylate exudation and concentration in proteoid root clusters showed a non-linear response for citrate, within the range of 7 to 23 mol g–1 fresh weight. This association was further assessed by altering citrate concentration in the whole root. Adding P to 24-day-old P-starved plants reduced citrate concentration and exudation to the level of the control P-fed plants, demonstrating that citrate exudation and concentration are associated. Malate exudation and concentration did not correlate significantly. Results indicate that citrate release by P-starved white lupin would occur whenever a certain threshold of citrate concentration is attained, and that the sites, the rates and the span of transient exudation depend on the physiological age of the tissue.  相似文献   

12.
Aluminium (Al) toxicity or phosphorus (P) deficiency can induce exudation of organic acids from the roots of some plants, which is believed to be a tolerance mechanism against Al toxicity or P deficiency. In the present study, the effect of P deficiency on Al-induced citrate exudation was investigated in three soybean varieties differing in low-P tolerance. P starvation alone failed to induce secretion of organic acids from all three soybean varieties. However, P deficiency altered Al-induced citrate exudation over time, showing a complex interaction. Short × term P starvation (4 days) produced up to 50% increase in Al-induced citrate secretion, while longer-term (10 days) starvation reduced Al-induced citrate secretion to trace amounts. However, after a further 1 day in complete nutrient solution for recovery, Al-induced citrate exudation from the recovered roots was approximately 6 times higher than that from the continuously P-starved plants, but still approximately 3.6 times lower than that from the P-sufficient control. With increasing P or Al supply, Al-induced citrate exudation increased, while Al accumulation in soybean roots decreased in parallel with the decrease of P supply. The photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance and transpiration were decreased by P deficiency, whereas the intracellular CO2 concentration was increased. These findings indicate that P nutrition has a significant effect on Al-induced citrate exudation and Al accumulation in soybean root apices.  相似文献   

13.
White lupin (Lupinus albus L. cv. Amiga) reacts to phosphate deficiency by producing cluster roots which exude large amounts of organic acids. The detailed knowledge of the excretion physiology of the different root parts makes it a good model plant to study plant-bacteria interaction. Since the effect of the organic acid exudation by cluster roots on the rhizosphere microflora is still poorly understood, we investigated the abundance, diversity and functions of bacteria associated with the cluster roots of white lupin, with special emphasis on the influence of root proximity (comparing root, rhizosphere soil and bulk soil fractions) and cluster root growth stages, which are characterized by different excretion activities. Plants were grown for five weeks in microcosms, in the presence of low phosphate concentrations, on acidic sand inoculated with a soil suspension from a lupin field. Plate counts showed that bacterial abundance decreased at the stage where the cluster root excretes high amounts of citrate and protons. In vitro tests on isolates showed that the frequencies of auxin producers were highest in juvenile and mature cluster roots and significantly decreased in senescent cluster roots. However, no significant difference in the frequency of auxin producers was found between cluster and non cluster roots. The diversity and structure of bacterial communities were investigated by DGGE of 16S rDNA and 16S rRNA. The diversity and community structure were mostly influenced by root proximity and, to a lesser extent, by cluster root stage. The richness of bacterial communities decreased with root proximity, whereas the proportion of active populations increased. The high citrate and proton excretion occurring at the mature stage of cluster roots had a strong impact on the structure and richness of the bacterial communities, both in the root and in the rhizosphere soil.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of nutrient deficiency, aeration, phosphorus supply, and nitrogen source on the formation of cluster (proteoid) roots was examined in Myrica gale seedlings growing in water culture. Only the omission of phosphorus resulted in the formation of significant numbers to cluster roots when plants were grown in a number of 1/4 strength Hoagland's solutions, each lacking one mineral nutrient. Aeration shortened the time required for cluster root formation and increased the percentage of plants forming cluster roots. The proportion of the root system comprised of cluster roots decreased as the phosphorus concentration in the solution increased and no cluster roots formed in solutions containing 8 mg P/L. Phosphorus supply also affected total plant biomass, proportion of biomass comprising nitrogen-fixing nodules, shoot:root ratio, phosphorus concentration in the leaves and phosphorus content of the plants. The plants showed luxury consumption of phosphorus and were able to produce large amounts of biomass utilizing only stored phosphorus.Nitrogen source also affected cluster root formation. Urea-fed plants produced cluster roots more quickly and devoted a substantially larger proportion of root growth to cluster roots than did nitrate-fed plants. The longest cluster root axes were produced in nitrate-fed plants supplied with no phosphorus and the shortest were in urea-fed plants at 4 mg P L–1.Four methods for expressing the extent of cluster root formation were examined and it was concluded that cluster roots as a proportion of total fine root dry weight is preferable in many cases. Formation of cluster roots in response to phosphorus deficiency coupled with previously demonstrated traits allows Myrica gale to adapt to a wide range of soil conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Morphological and biochemical interactions between a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus (Glomus fasciculatum [Thaxt. sensu Gerdemann] Gerdemann and Trappe) and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants during the development of P deficiency were characterized. Nonmycorrhizal (NM) plants grown for 63 d with low abiotic P supply (0.5 mM) produced 34, 52, and 73% less root, shoot, and tuber dry matter, respectively, than plants grown with high P (2.5 mM). The total leaf area and the leaf area:plant dry weight ratio of low-P plants were substantially lower than those of high-P plants. Moreover, a lower shoot:root dry weight ratio and tuber:plant dry weight ratio in low-P plants than in high-P plants characterized a major effect of P deficiency stress on dry matter partitioning. In addition to a slower rate of growth, low-P plants accumulated nonreducing sugars and nitrate. Furthermore, root respiration and leaf nitrate reductase activity were lower in low-P plants than in high-P plants. Low abiotic P supply also induced physiological changes that contributed to the greater efficiency of P acquisition by low-P plants than by high-P plants. For example, allocation of dry matter and P to root growth was less restricted by P deficiency stress than to shoot and tuber growth. Also, the specific activities of root acid phosphatases and vanadate-sensitive microsomal ATPases were enhanced in P-deficient plants. The establishment of a VAM symbiosis by low-P plants was essential for efficient P acquisition, and a greater root infection level for P-stressed plants indicated increased compatibility to the VAM fungus. By 63 d after planting, low-P VAM plants had recovered 42% more of the available soil P than low-P NM plants. However, the VAM fungus only partially alleviated P deficiency stress and did not completely compensate for inadequate abiotic P supply. Although the specific activities of acid phosphatases and microsomal ATPases were only marginally influenced by VAM infection, VAM roots characteristically had a higher protein concentration and, consequently, enhanced microsomal ATPase and acid phosphatase activities on a fresh weight basis compared with NM roots. Morphological and ultrastructural details of VAM plants are discussed in relation to the influence of the VAM symbiosis on P nutrition of potato.  相似文献   

16.
We studied the role of modification in root exudation induced by colonization with Glomus intraradices and Glomus mosseae in the growth of Phytophthora nicotianae in tomato roots. Plants were grown in a compartmentalized plant growth system and were either inoculated with the AM fungi or received exudates from mycorrhizal plants, with the corresponding controls. Three weeks after planting, the plants were inoculated or not with P. nicotianae growing from an adjacent compartment. At harvest, P. nicotianae biomass was significantly reduced in roots colonized with G. intraradices or G. mosseae in comparison to non-colonized roots. Conversely, pathogen biomass was similar in non-colonized roots supplied with exudates collected from mycorrhizal or non-mycorrhizal roots, or with water. We cannot rule out that a mycorrhiza-mediated modification in root exudation may take place, but our results did not support that a change in pathogen chemotactic responses to host root exudates may be involved in the inhibition of P. nicotianae.  相似文献   

17.
Liao H  Wan H  Shaff J  Wang X  Yan X  Kochian LV 《Plant physiology》2006,141(2):674-684
Aluminum (Al) toxicity and phosphorus (P) deficiency often coexist in acid soils that severely limit crop growth and production, including soybean (Glycine max). Understanding the physiological mechanisms relating to plant Al and P interactions should help facilitate the development of more Al-tolerant and/or P-efficient crops. In this study, both homogeneous and heterogeneous nutrient solution experiments were conducted to study the effects of Al and P interactions on soybean root growth and root organic acid exudation. In the homogenous solution experiments with a uniform Al and P distribution in the bulk solution, P addition significantly increased Al tolerance in four soybean genotypes differing in P efficiency. The two P-efficient genotypes appeared to be more Al tolerant than the two P-inefficient genotypes under these high-P conditions. Analysis of root exudates indicated Al toxicity induced citrate exudation, P deficiency triggered oxalate exudation, and malate release was induced by both treatments. To more closely mimic low-P acid soils where P deficiency and Al toxicity are often much greater in the lower soil horizons, a divided root chamber/nutrient solution approach was employed to impose elevated P conditions in the simulated upper soil horizon, and Al toxicity/P deficiency in the lower horizon. Under these conditions, we found that the two P-efficient genotypes were more Al tolerant during the early stages of the experiment than the P-inefficient lines. Although the same three organic acids were exuded by roots in the divided chamber experiments, their exudation patterns were different from those in the homogeneous solution system. The two P-efficient genotypes secreted more malate from the taproot tip, suggesting that improved P nutrition may enhance exudation of organic acids in the root regions dealing with the greatest Al toxicity, thus enhancing Al tolerance. These findings demonstrate that P efficiency may play a role in Al tolerance in soybean. Phosphorus-efficient genotypes may be able to enhance Al tolerance not only through direct Al-P interactions but also through indirect interactions associated with stimulated exudation of different Al-chelating organic acids in specific roots and root regions.  相似文献   

18.
Seedlings of two cultivars of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) differing in tolerance to aluminium (Al) were grown using a split-root sand/soil culture technique. Each culture tube was divided horizontally into a surface (0–150 mm) compartment and a subsurface (150–250 mm) compartment separated by a root-permeable paraffin wax barrier. Thus phosphorus (P) supplied to surface roots could not percolate or diffuse into the soil in the subsurface compartment. The soil in the subsurface compartment was divided into ‘rhizosphere’ and ‘non-rhizosphere’ zones using a porous (5 μm) membrane. Root growth of both cultivars into the subsurface zone was enhanced by increased P supply to surface roots, but did not conform to known relationships between root growth and soil pH, extractable-Al, or pH, Al or P concentrations in soil solution. Concentrations of Al in soil solution in the rhizosphere were greater than those in solution in the bulk soil. Concentrations of Al reactive with pyrocatechol violet (30s-RRAI) in the rhizosphere soil solution were generally greater than those in non-rhizosphere soil. With the Al-sensitive cultivar, root dry weight and length increased as concentrations of RRAl in the rhizosphere soil solution increased. Increased concentrations of Al in rhizosphere soil solutions were not related to the presence of organic ligands in solution. The effect of P in promoting root penetration into the acidic subsurface stratum was not related to differential attainment of maturity by the plant shoots, but appeared to be related to the effect of P in enhancing the rate of root growth. Thus, suboptimal supply of P to the surface roots of a plant, even at levels sufficient to preclude development of nutritional (P) stress symptoms, may seriously reduce tolerance to Al, and hence diminish the ability of roots to penetrate into acidic subsoils.  相似文献   

19.
Soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr var Amsoy 71) were grown in growth chambers with high-phosphorus (high-P) and low-phosphorus (low-P) culture solutions. Low-P treatment reduced shoot growth significantly 7 days after treatment began. Root growth was much less affected by low-P, there being no significant reduction in root growth rate until 17 days had elapsed. The results suggest that low-P treatment decreased soybean growth primarily through an effect on the expansion of the leaf surface which was diminished by 85%, the main effect of low-P being on the rate of expansion of individual leaves. Low-P had a lesser effect on photosynthesis; light saturated photosynthetic rates at ambient and saturating CO2 levels were lowered by 55 and 45%, respectively, after 19 days of low-P treatment. Low-P treatment increased starch concentrations in mature leaves, expanding leaves and fibrous roots; sucrose concentrations, however, were reduced by low-P in leaves and increased in roots. Foliar F-2,6-BP levels were not affected by P treatment in the light but in darkness they increased with high-P and decreased with low-P. The increase in the starch/sucrose ratio in low-P leaves was correlated primarily with changes in the total activities of enzymes of starch and sucrose metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Hagström  J.  James  W.M.  Skene  K.R. 《Plant and Soil》2001,232(1-2):81-90
Cluster roots are adaptations for nutrient acquisition, found throughout the world in many different plant families and habitats. They arise from changes in root initiation, meristem maintenance and physiology. In Lupinus albus cluster roots form under low internal plant phosphate and low internal plant iron levels. In this study, we compare morphology, structure and physiology of cluster roots formed under –P and –Fe conditions. –Fe cluster roots had a lower density of shorter rootlets than –P roots, and were yellow in colour, probably because of increased phenolics due to down-regulation of peroxidase. Rootlet length and width was reduced in –Fe conditions. The change in exudation of citrate, over time, of –P and –Fe cluster roots shared identical temporal dynamics, with an exudative burst occurring in day 3. However, the –Fe cluster roots displayed much higher rates of exudation than the –P cluster roots. Results are discussed within the context of structural and functional control.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号