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1.
Serraj  Rachid  Sinclair  T.R. 《Plant and Soil》1998,202(1):159-166
Both nodulation and nitrogen fixation in soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] are sensitive to soil drying, which can have important negative effects on yield. An exception to this general response has been the identification of the cultivar Jackson as being drought tolerant for N2 fixation. The objectives of this research were to examine nodule formation and growth in Jackson among other soybean cultivars in response to soil drying under field conditions. Two field experiments were conducted to examine the genetic variation in the sensitivity of nodule numbers and dry weights to soil drying. Substantial variation among soybean lines was found, and the drought-tolerance trait was demonstrated again in Jackson. Greenhouse experiments were conducted to further analyze the variation of nodulation response to soil water content. The differences among cultivars observed in the field were confirmed in the greenhouse. Importantly, the relative drought insensitivity of N2 fixation in cultivar Jackson was associated with high individual nodule dry weight under drought conditions, relative to well-watered plants. It was concluded that large variation in nodulation sensitivity to water deficit exists among soybean cultivars and that the response of N2 fixation rates to drought is related in part to nodule formation and growth.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrogen fixation (NF) in soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) is highly sensitive to soil drying. This sensitivity has been related to an accumulation of nitrogen compounds, either in shoots or in nodules, and a nodular carbon flux shortage under drought. To assess the relative importance of carbon and nitrogen status on NF regulation, the responses to the early stages of drought were monitored with two soybean cultivars with known contrasting tolerance to drought. In the sensitive cultivar ('Biloxi'), NF inhibition occurred earlier and was more dramatic than in the tolerant cultivar ('Jackson'). The carbon flux to bacteroids was also more affected in 'Biloxi' than in 'Jackson', due to an earlier inhibition of sucrose synthase activity and a larger decrease of malate concentration in the former. Drought provoked ureide accumulation in nodules of both cultivars, but this accumulation was higher and occurred earlier in 'Biloxi'. However, at this early stage of drought, there was no accumulation of ureides in the leaves of either cultivar. These results indicate that a combination of both reduced carbon flux and nitrogen accumulation in nodules, but not in shoots, is involved in the inhibition of NF in soybean under early drought.  相似文献   

3.
Nitrogen fixation activity in common bean is generally thoughtto be low and sensitive to soil drying and, consequently, droughtcan have important negative effects on N accumulation and yieldpotential. The objectives of this research were to examine theresponse of N2fixation to drought stress in common bean, andto test the hypothesis that drought sensitivity of N2fixationin common bean is linked to ureide levels in the plants. Twoglasshouse experiments were conducted to compare the responsesof leaf transpiration and acetylene reduction activity (ARA)to soil water contents. ARA decrease during soil dehydrationwas found to lag behind the decline in transpiration. This indicatesthat ARA is relatively less sensitive to soil dehydration comparedto leaf gas exchange. Further, in comparing two cultivars therewas no consistent difference in the relative response of ARAand transpiration to soil drying. The ureide concentrationsmeasured in common bean plants were low, ranging from 0.1 to1.0 mmol l-1in xylem sap exudates. Ureide concentrations inthe sap exudate varied significantly among the two genotypeseven though there was no difference in ARA response to drought.It was concluded that in common bean, the lower sensitivityof N2fixation to drought compared to leaf gas exchange couldbe related to low ureide concentrations in petioles and xylemsap.Copyright 1998 Annals of Botany Company Phaseolus vulgaris,nitrogen fixation, drought stress, nodules, ureides.  相似文献   

4.

Aims

Common bean is a major source of protein for many people worldwide. However, the crop is often subjected to drought conditions and its advantage in undertaking symbiotic nitrogen fixation can be severely decreased. The primary objective of this study was to compare the resistance of nitrogen fixation of 12 selected genotypes to soil drying.

Methods

Twelve common bean genotypes of diverse genetic background were compared. Plants were grown in pots and subjected to soil drying over about 2 weeks. Nitrogen fixation was measured daily using a flow-through acetylene reduction technique. The plants were exposed to acetylene for only a short time period allowing repeated measures. The acetylene reduction rate of plants on drying soil was normalized against the rates measured for well-watered plants.

Results

Substantial variability was identified among genotypes in the threshold soil water content at which nitrogen fixation was observed to decrease. Genotypes SER 16, SXB 412, NCB 226, and Calima were found to have the greatest delay in their decrease in nitrogen fixation rates based on soil water content. These four genotypes expressed substantial tolerance of nitrogen fixation to soil drying. These experiments also resulted in data on the threshold soil water contents at which transpiration rates decreased. A decrease in transpiration rates at high soil water contents is potentially advantageous since it allows soil water conservation for use as the severity of the drought increases. There was a general trend of those genotypes with sustained nitrogen fixation rates to low soil water contents also expressing decreased transpiration rates at high soil water contents.

Conclusions

This study identified genetic variation among common bean genotypes in their response of nitrogen fixation and transpiration to soil drying. Five genotypes (SER 16, SXB 412, NCB 226, Calima, and SEA 5) expressed the desired traits for water-limited conditions, which might be exploited in breeding efforts.  相似文献   

5.
Purcell  Larry C.  de Silva  Manjula  King  C. Andy  Han Kim  Wook 《Plant and Soil》1997,196(1):101-113
Nitrogen fixation in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) is more sensitive to water deficits than many physiological processes and may therefore limit yield under nonirrigated conditions. Tolerance of nitrogen fixation to water deficits has been observed in the cultivar Jackson, however, the physiological basis for this is unclear. It was hypothesized that genotypes that could continue biomass production on limited soil water would prolong nitrogen fixation by continued photosynthate allocation to nodules. An initial greenhouse experiment compared biomass and N accumulation in six genotypes over an 8 d water deficit. Low stress intensity minimized genotypic expression of water-deficit tolerance; nevertheless, Jackson was clearly one of the most tolerant genotypes. In a second experiment, Jackson was compared to SCE82-303 at more severe stress levels. Biomass and N accumulation continued during water deficits for Jackson but ceased in SCE82-303. Individual nodule mass tended to increase during water deficits in Jackson and tended to decrease in SCE82-303, indicating greater allocation of photosynthate to Jackson's nodules in response to water deficits. Biomass accumulation of Jackson was contrasted with the USDA plant introduction (PI) 416937, which also has demonstrated tolerance to water deficits. For water-deficit treatments, total biomass accumulation was negligible for PI416937, but biomass accumulation continued at approximately 64% of the control treatment for Jackson. Transpirational losses for Jackson and PI416937 were approximately the same for the water-deficit treatment, indicating that Jackson had higher water use efficiency (WUE). Isotopic discrimination of 13C relative to12 C also indicated that Jackson had superior WUE during water deficits. Carbon-14 allocation in Jackson was compared to KS4895, a cultivar that was identified as sensitive to water deficits in an initial experiment. The comparison of water-deficit treatments of Jackson with KS4895 indicated that Jackson exported significantly greater amounts of14 C from labeled leaves and allocated approximately four times greater amounts of 14C per g of nodule. Results indicated that Jackson's sustained biomass production during water deficits resulted in the continued allocation of photosynthate to nodules and prolonged nitrogenase activity.  相似文献   

6.
Drought stress is one of the major factors affecting nitrogen fixation by legume-rhizobium symbiosis. Several mechanisms have been previously reported to be involved in the physiological response of symbiotic nitrogen fixation to drought stress, i.e. carbon shortage and nodule carbon metabolism, oxygen limitation, and feedback regulation by the accumulation of N fixation products. The carbon shortage hypothesis was previously investigated by studying the combined effects of CO2 enrichment and water deficits on nodulation and N2 fixation in soybean. Under drought, in a genotype with drought tolerant N2 fixation, approximately four times the amount of 14C was allocated to nodules compared to a drought sensitive genotype. It was found that an important effect of CO2 enrichment of soybean under drought was an enhancement of photo assimilation, an increased partitioning of carbon to nodules, whose main effect was to sustain nodule growth, which helped sustain N2 rates under soil water deficits. The interaction of nodule permeability to O2 and drought stress with N2 fixation was examined in soybean nodules and led to the overall conclusion that O2 limitation seems to be involved only in the initial stages of water deficit stresses in decreasing nodule activity. The involvement of ureides in the drought response of N2 fixation was initially suspected by an increased ureide concentration in shoots and nodules under drought leading to a negative feedback response between ureides and nodule activity. Direct evidence for inhibition of nitrogenase activity by its products, ureides and amides, supported this hypothesis. The overall conclusion was that all three physiological mechanisms are important in understanding the regulation of N2 fixation and its response of to soil drying.  相似文献   

7.
In short-season soybean production areas, low soil temperature is the major factor limiting plant growth and yield. The decreases in soybean yield at low temperatures are mainly due to nitrogen limitation. Genistein, the most effective plant-to-bacterium signal in the soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) nitrogen fixation symbiosis, was used to pretreat Bradyrhizobium japonicum. We have previously reported that this increased soybean nodulation and nitrogen fixation in growth chamber studies. Two field experiments were conducted on two adjacent sites in 1994 to determine whether the incubation of B. japonicum with genistein, prior to application as an inoculant, or genistein, without B. japonicum, applied onto seeds in the furrow at the time of planting, increased soybean grain yield and protein yield in short season areas. The results of these experiments indicated that genistein-preincubated bradyrhizobia increased the grain yield and protein yield of AC Bravor, the later maturing of the two cultivars tested. Genistein without B. japonicum, applied onto seeds in the furrow at the time of planting also increased both grain and protein yield by stimulation of native soil B. japonicum. Interactions existed between genistein application and soybean cultivars, and indicated that the cultivar with the greatest yield potential responded more to genistein addition.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction) rates of nodules on intact field-grown soybean (Glycine max) subjected to altered oxygen concentration (0.06-0.4 cubic millimeter per cubic millimeter) returned to initial rates during an 8-hour transitory period. Hydroponically grown soybean plants also displayed a transitory (1-4 hours) response to changes in the rhizosphere oxygen concentration after which the fixation rates returned to those observed under ambient oxygen concentrations. It was hypothesized that soybean nodules contain a regulatory mechanism which maintains a stable oxygen concentration inside nodules at a sufficiently low concentration to allow nitrogenase to function. A possible physiological mechanism which could account for this regulation is adjustment in nodule respiration activity such that nodule oxygen concentration and nitrogen fixation are maintained at stable levels. Experiments designed to characterize the non-steady-state oxygen response and to test for the presence of nodule respiratory control are presented. Non-steady-state acetylene reduction and nodule respiration (oxygen uptake) rates measured after alterations in the external oxygen concentration indicated that the regulatory mechanism required 1 to 4 hours to completely adjust to changes in the external oxygen concentration. Steady-state nodule respiration, however, did not respond to alterations in the rhizosphere oxygen concentration. It was concluded that soybean nodules can adjust to a wide range of rhizosphere oxygen concentrations, but the mechanism which controls nitrogen fixation rates does not involve changes in the nodule respiration rate.  相似文献   

9.
Eighty soybean cultivars were assessed for their potential for nodulation and nitrogen fixation with indigenous rhizobia in a Nigerian soil. Seventy-six days after planting (DAP) 87%, 3% and 10% of the soybean cultivars had from 0 to 30, 31 to 60 and over 61 nodules/plant, respectively. Only 8% had a nodule dry weight of 600 to 1100 mg/plant. At 84 DAP the proportion of nitrogen derived from the atmosphere (Ndfa) ranged from 0 to 65% 16% of the cultivars derived 51 to 65% of their N2 from the atmosphere. The diversity of soybean germplasm and the variation in nodulation and N2 fixation permitted the selection of the five best cultivars in terms of their compatibility with indigenous rhizobia, % Ndfa and the amount of N2 which they fixed.  相似文献   

10.
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation is highly sensitive to drought, which results in decreased N accumulation and yield of legume crops. The effects of drought stress on N2 fixation usually have been perceived as a consequence of straightforward physiological responses acting on nitrogenase activity and involving exclusively one of three mechanisms: carbon shortage, oxygen limitation, or feedback regulation by nitrogen accumulation. The sensitivity of the nodule water economy to the volumetric flow rate of the phloem into the nodule offers a common framework to understand each of these mechanism. As these processes are sensitive to volumetric phloem flow into the nodules, variations in phloem flow as a result of changes in turgor pressure in the leaves are likely to cause rapid changes in nodule activity. This could explain the special sensitivity of N2 fixation to drying soils. It seems likely that N feedback may be especially important in explaining the response mechanism in nodules. A number of studies have indicated that a nitrogenous signal(s), associated with N accumulation in the shoot and nodule, exists in legume plants so that N2 fixation is inhibited early in soil drying. The existence of genetic variation in N2 fixation response to water deficits among legume cultivars opens the possibility for enhancing N2 fixation tolerance to drought through selection and breeding.  相似文献   

11.
King CA  Purcell LC 《Plant physiology》2005,137(4):1389-1396
Decreased N2 fixation in soybean (Glycine max) L. Merr. during water deficits has been associated with increases in ureides and free amino acids in plant tissues, indicating a potential feedback inhibition by these compounds in response to drought. We evaluated concentrations of ureides and amino acids in leaf and nodule tissue and the concurrent change in N2 fixation in response to exogenous ureides and soil-water treatments for the cultivars Jackson and KS4895. Exogenous ureides applied to the soil and water-deficit treatments inhibited N2 fixation by 85% to 90%. Mn fertilization increased the apparent catabolism of ureides in leaves and hastened the recovery of N2 fixation following exogenous ureide application for both cultivars. Ureides and total free amino acids in leaves and nodules increased during water deficits and coincided with a decline in N2 fixation for both cultivars. N2 fixation recovered to 74% to 90% of control levels 2 d after rewatering drought-stressed plants, but leaf ureides and total nodule amino acids remained elevated in KS4895. Asparagine accounted for 82% of the increase in nodule amino acids relative to well-watered plants at 2 d after rewatering. These results indicate that leaf ureides and nodule asparagine do not feedback inhibit N2 fixation. Compounds whose increase and decrease in concentration mirrored the decline and recovery of N2 fixation included nodule ureides, nodule aspartate, and several amino acids in leaves, indicating that these are potential candidate molecules for feedback inhibition of N2 fixation.  相似文献   

12.
Peanuts (Arachis hypogea L.) are often grown on sandy soils and drought stress can be a major limitation on yield. In particular, loss in nitrogen fixation activity associated with soil drying might be limiting due to the need for high nitrogen amounts in both vegetative tissues and seeds of peanut. This study examined the response of nitrogen fixation of intact plants of seventeen peanut genotypes when subjected to soil drying in pots over approximately a 2-wk period. A large range in the sensitivity of nitrogen fixation to soil drying was observed among the seventeen genotypes. Genotype ICGV86015, in particular, was found to have nitrogen fixation that was especially tolerant of soil drying. Significant positive (P?<?0.0001) correlation was found between the soil water content at which nitrogen fixation began decreasing and the amino acid concentration in the leaves of severely stressed plants.  相似文献   

13.
The combined effects of carbon dioxide (CO2) enrichment and water deficits on nodulation and N2 fixation were analysed in soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.]. Two short-term experiments were conducted in greenhouses with plants subjected to soil drying, while exposed to CO2 atmospheres of either 360 or 700 μmol CO2 mol–1. Under drought-stressed conditions, elevated [CO2] resulted in a delay in the decrease in N2 fixation rates associated with drying of the soil used in these experiments. The elevated [CO2] also allowed the plants under drought to sustain significant increases in nodule number and mass relative to those under ambient [CO2]. The total non-structural carbohydrate (TNC) concentration was lower in the shoots of the plants exposed to drought; however, plants under elevated CO2 had much higher TNC levels than those under ambient CO2. For both [CO2] treatments, drought stress induced a substantial accumulation of TNC in the nodules that paralleled N2 fixation decline, which indicates that nodule activity under drought may not be carbon limited. Under drought stress, ureide concentration increased in all plant tissues. However, exposure to elevated [CO2] resulted in substantially less drought-induced ureide accumulation in leaf and petiole tissues. A strong negative correlation was found between ureide accumulation and TNC levels in the leaves. This relationship, together with the large effect of elevated [CO2] on the decrease of ureide accumulation in the leaves, indicated the importance of ureide breakdown in the response of N2 fixation to drought and of feedback inhibition by ureides on nodule activity. It is concluded that an important effect of CO2 enrichment on soybean under drought conditions is an enhancement of photoassimilation, an increased partitioning of carbon to nodules and a decrease of leaf ureide levels, which is associated with sustained nodule growth and N2 rates under soil water deficits. We suggest that future [CO2] increases are likely to benefit soybean production by increasing the drought tolerance of N2 fixation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The seasonal patterns of nodulation, acetylene reduction, nitrogen uptake and nitrogen fixation were studies for 11 pigeonpea cultivars belonging to different maturity groups grown on an Alfisol at ICRISAT Center, Patancheru, India. In all cultivars the nodule number and mass increased to a maximum around 60–80 days after sowing and then declined. The nodule number and mass of medium- and late-maturing cultivars was greater than that of early-maturing cultivars. The nitrogenase activity per plant increased to 60 days after sowing and declined thereafter, with little activity at 100 days when the crop was flowering. At later stages of plant growth nodules formed down to 90 cm below the soil surface but those at greater depth appeared less active than those near the surface. All the 11 cultivars continued to accumulate dry matter until 140 days, with most biomass production by the late-maturing cultivars (up to 11 t ha−1) and least by the early-maturing determinate cultivars (4 t ha−1). Total nitrogen uptake ranged from 69 to 134 kg ha−1. Nitrogen fixation by pigeonpea was estimated as the difference in total nitrogen uptake between pigeonpea and sorghum and could amount to 69 kg N ha−1 per season, or half the total nitrogen uptake. Fixation by pigeonpea increased with crop duration, but there were differences within each maturity group. The limitations of the methods used for estimating N2 fixation by pigeonpea are discussed. Submitted as J.A. No. 552 by the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT).  相似文献   

15.
Summary Isotopic as well as non-isotopic methods were used to assess symbiotic nitrogen fixation within eight soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cultivars grown at 20 and 100 kg N/ha levels of nitrogen fertilizer under field conditions.The15N methodology revealed large differences between soybean cultivars in their abilities to support nitrogen fixation. In almost all cases, the application of 100 kg N/ha resulted in lower N2 fixed in soybean than at 20 kg N/ha in the first year of the study. However, N2 fixed in one cultivar, Dunadja, was not significantly affected by the higher rate of N fertilizer application. These results were confirmed by measurements of acetylene reduction activity, nodule dry weight and N2 fixed as measured by the difference method. Further proof of differences in N2 fixed within soybean cultivars and the ability of Dunadja to fix similar amounts of N2 at 20 and 100 kg N/ha was obtained during a second year experiment. Dunadja yield was affected by N fertilizer and produced larger yield at 100 kg N/ha than at 20 kg N/ha. This type of cultivar could be particularly useful in situations where soil N levels are high or where there is need to apply high amounts of N fertilizer.The present study reveals the great variability between legume germplasms in the ability to fix N2 at different inorganic N levels, and also the potential that exists in breeding for nitrogen fixation associative traits. The15N methodology offers a unique tool to evaluate germplasms directly in the field for their N2 fixation abilities at different N fertilizer levels.  相似文献   

16.
Metabolites that accumulated in soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.]nodules after inhibition of nitrogen fixation were analysedto determine what carbon compounds the bacteroids might obtainfrom their host. Exposure of roots of intact soybean plantsto 100% O2 for 5 min caused a decrease in acetylene reductionactivity within 10 min and then the activity recovered onlyslowly. Analysis of carbohydrates, organic acids, volatile compoundsand amino acids in extracts of nodules revealed that succinate,malate and alanine all accumulated within 10 min after treatmentwith O2. The concentrations of sucrose, acetone, tyrosine, valine,isoleucine, leucine, and ornithine in the nodules increasedslowly after such treatment. The results are discussed in termsof carbon sources for supporting nitrogen fixation of soybeanbacteroids. Key words: Glycine max, carbon metabolism, nitrogen fixation, nodules  相似文献   

17.
Leaf water relations, stomatal conductance (g) and shoot growthrate (SGR) were monitored during a soil drying cycle in threesugarcane cultivars growing in pots in a greenhouse. The pressure-volumetechnique was used to evaluate diurnal and droughtinduced variationin leaf water relations characteristics. Leaf solute contentand bulk elasticity varied diurnally in both irrigated and droughtedplants and were highest at midday. Solute accumulation and increasedelasticity were also observed as leaf water deficits developedmore slowly during soil drying. This osmotic and elastic adjustmentmaintained symplast volume essentially constant both diurnallyand during soil drying, whereas turgor was only partially maintained.The extent of osmotic adjustment associated with drought wasnot reflected in the leaf osmotic potential at full turgor becausethe concurrent increase in tissue elasticity resulted in a largersymplast volume at full turgor. Cultivar responses over therange of leaf water deficits imposed did not provide conclusiveevidence for genotypic variation in osmotic and elastic adjustment.It appeared that behavioural differences in rates of water usemay have determined the magnitude of osmotic and elastic adjustmentin response to drought. In the early stages of soil drying,reductions in SGR and g were not accompanied by significantreductions in bulk leaf water status. This suggested that otherfactors, presumably signals originating from the roots, mayhave regulated SGR and g.  相似文献   

18.
While diurnal cycles in nitrogen fixation rates are sometimes assumed to result from diurnal variation in photosynthetically active radiation, contradicting evidence exists that indicate soil temperature is the primary environmental influence. These studies assessed the significance of temperature on soybean nitrogen fixation under field conditions. Two groups of intact field-grown soybean plants, one at ambient and the other exposed to a 10°C diurnal variation in soil temperature, were nondestructively assayed for acetylene reduction rates. Activity was closely associated with soil temperature (R2=0.85), even when temperature was 12 h out of phase with ambient. Data were also obtained to determine if the effects of rhizosphere temperature on nitrogen fixation are mediated through an effect on the nodule oxygen permeability. Nodule oxygen permeability of intact, aeroponically grown soybean was closely correlated with the diurnal changes in temperature (R2=0.90).  相似文献   

19.
Nitrogen fixation and assimilation in nodules and roots were studied in soybean (Glycine max L.) exposed to different levels of aluminium (Al) stress (0, 50, 200 and 500 μM). Al at 500 μM induced oxidative stress, which became evident from an increase in lipid peroxidation accompanied by a concomitant decline in antioxidant enzyme activities and leghaemoglobin breakdown. Consequently, there was also a reduction in nitrogenase activity. However, the leghaemoglobin levels and nitrogenase activity were unexpectedly found to be higher in nodules when the plants were treated with 200 μM Al. Of the enzymes involved in nitrogen assimilation, the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase-NADH was reduced in nodules under Al stress, but it was significantly higher in roots at 500 μM Al as compared to that in the control. In nodules, the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase-NADH pathway, assayed in terms of activity and expression of both the enzymes, was inhibited at >50 μM Al; but in roots this inhibitory effect was apparent only at 500 μM Al. No significant changes in ammonium and protein contents were recorded in the nodules or roots when the plants were treated with 50 μM Al. However, Al at ≥200 μM significantly increased the ammonium levels and decreased the protein content in the nodules. But these contrasting effects on ammonium and protein contents due to Al stress were observed in the roots only at 500 μM Al. The results suggest that the effect of Al stress on nitrogen assimilation is more conspicuous in nodules than that in the roots of soybean plants.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The effects of twelve strains ofBradyrhizobium japonicum and ten cultivars of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) on plant and nodule weights, and acetylene reduction rates (33 to 41 days) were measured in the presence and absence of 6mM nitrate. No interactions between strains and cultivars were observed. Strain by nitrate interactions were found for plant and nodule weights, and acetylene reduction rates per gram of nodule. Cultivar by nitrate interactions were found for nodule weights, acetylene reduction rates per plant and per gram of nodule. Blackhawk with all strains, and all cultivars with strains 110 and CB 1809, seemed to be able to grow as well in the absence of nitrate (utilizing nodule fixation) as in its presence. The problems of identifying strains and cultivars with especially good nitrogen fixing ability in the presence of nitrate are discussed.  相似文献   

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