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1.
Zhang  Feng  Smith  Donald L. 《Plant and Soil》1997,192(1):141-151
In the soybean (Glycine max. (L.) Merr)– Bradyrhizobium japonicum symbiosis, suboptimal root zone temperatures (RZTs) slow nodule development by disruption of the interorganismal signal exchange between the host plant and bradyrhizobia. 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 nodulation, N fixation, and total N yield. The results of these experiments indicated that genistein application increased nodule number and nodule dry matter per plant and hastened the onset of N fixation during the early portion of the soybean growing season, when the soils were still cool. Because these variables were improved, total fixed. N, fixed N as a percentage of total plant N, and N yield increased due to genistein application. The interaction between genistein application and soybean cultivars indicated that genistein application was more effective on N-stressed plants.  相似文献   

2.
The objective of this study was to determine the effects of soil water and soil strength on root growth in situations where the individual effects of both of these factors were important. Three grain legumes were grown from pre-germinated seeds for five days on 50-mm compacted columns of two major soils of Sri Lanka. Four or five levels of bulk density (1.1 to 1.8 Mg.m–3) and five or six levels of matric potential (–0.02 to–2.0 MPa) were used.Soil strength and matric potential effects on root growth were independently significant for most crop and soil combinations. Under high (wet) matric potential (>–0.77 MPa) soil conditions, the effect of soil water on root growth was evident only in its effect on soil strength. Bulk density had a significant effect on root growth independent of soil strength and matric potential in three cases.For all crops and soils, root penetration was 80% of the maximum or greater when the average soil strength (soil water not limiting) was 0.75 MPa or less, and when the average matric potential (soil strength not limiting) was –0.77 MPa or greater (wetter). Root penetration was 20% of the maximum or less when the soil strength was greater than 3.30 MPa (soil water not limiting), and when matric potential (soil strength not limiting) was less than –3.57 MPa. The use of pre-germinated seeds, which contained imbibed water, combined with a lack of water loss from the closed chambers containing the plants is the probable cause for the very low (–3.57 MPa) matric potential that allowed root growth at 20% of the maximum.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of inorganic nitrogen (N) fertilizer on the ionic composition of the soil solution under maize (Zea mays L.) was studied. A pot experiment was carried out with two treatments combined factorially, with or without N application (Ca(NO3)2; +N and –N treatments, respectively), and with or without plants. Three looped hollow fiber samplers were installed in each pot to sample soil solutions nondestructively from the root zone, seven times during the 50-day growth period. Plants were harvested on the 50th day, and their nutrient contents determined.Effects of N fertilizer on the soil solutions were observed by the first sampling, 2 days after sowing. The concentrations of Ca and NO3 and electrical conductivity (EC) increased significantly in the +N treatments as direct effects of fertilizer application. In addition, the concentrations of Mg, K, Na and H+ also increased and that of P decreased significantly as indirect effects caused by the re-establishment of chemical equilibria. This suggested the greater supply as well as the greater possibility of leaching loss not only of NO3 but also of Ca, Mg and K. In the treatments with plants, the concentrations of NO3 , Ca, Mg and K decreased with time and pH increased significantly compared with the unplanted soil. The depletion of N in the soil solution roughly agreed with the amount of N taken up by the plant. The depletions of K from the soil solution amounted to less than 10% of the amount of the K taken up, suggesting intensive replenishment of K from exchange sites in the soil. Depletions of Ca and Mg were several times higher than the amounts taken up, indicating that the depletions resulted from the adsorption of the divalent cations by the soil rather than uptake by plants. Because NO3 is hardly absorbed by exchange sites in soil and was the dominant anion in solution, it was concluded that NO3 had a major role in controlling cation concentrations in the soil solution and, consequently, on their availability for uptake by plants as well as their possible leaching loss. ei]H Marschner  相似文献   

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