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1.
The response of legumes to inoculation with rhizobia can be affected by many factors. Little work has been undertaken to examine how indigenous populations or rhizobia affect this response. We conducted a series of inoculation trials in four Hawaiian soils with six legume species (Glycine max, Vigna unguiculata, Phaseolus lunatus, Leucaena leucocephala, Arachis hypogaea, and Phaseolus vulgaris) and characterized the native rhizobial populations for each species in terms of the number and effectiveness of the population for a particular host. Inoculated plants had, on average, 76% of the nodules formed by the inoculum strain, which effectively eliminated competition from native strains as a variable between soils. Rhizobia populations ranged from less than 6 × 100/g of soil to 1 × 104/g of soil. The concentration of nitrogen in shoots of inoculated plants was not higher than that in uninoculated controls when the most probable number MPN counts of rhizobia were at or above 2 × 101/g of soil unless the native population was completely ineffective. Tests of random isolates from nodules of uninoculated plants revealed that within most soil populations there was a wide range of effectiveness for N2 fixation. All populations had isolates that were ineffective in fixing N2. The inoculum strains generally did not fix more N2 than the average isolate from the soil population in single-isolate tests. Even when the inoculum strain proved to be a better symbiont than the soil rhizobia, there was no response to inoculation. Enhanced N2 fixation after inoculation was related to increased nodule dry weights. Although inoculation generally increased nodule number when there were less than 1 × 102 rhizobia per g of soil, there was no corresponding increase in nodule dry weight when native populations were effective. Most species compensated for reduced nodulation in soils with few rhizobia by increasing the size of nodules and therefore maintaining a nodule dry weight similar to that of inoculated plants with more nodules. Even when competition by native soil strains was overcome with a selected inoculum strain, it was not always possible to enhance N2 fixation when soil populations were above a threshold number and had some effective strains.  相似文献   

2.
Groat RG  Vance CP 《Plant physiology》1981,67(6):1198-1203
Nitrogenase-dependent acetylene reduction activity of glasshouse-grown alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) decreased rapidly in response both to harvesting (80% shoot removal) and applied NO3 at 40 and 80 kilograms N per hectare. Acetylene reduction activity of harvested plants grown on 0 kilogram N per hectare began to recover by day 15 as shoot regrowth became significant. In contrast, acetylene reduction activity of all plants treated with 80 kilograms NO3-N per hectare and harvested plants treated with 40 kilograms NO3-N per hectare remained low for the duration of the experiment. Acetylene reduction of unharvested alfalfa treated with 40 kilograms N per hectare declined to an intermediate level and appeared to recover slightly by day 15. Changes in N2-fixing capacity were accompanied by similar changes in levels of nodule soluble protein.  相似文献   

3.
Four local rhizobia isolates selected after two screening experiments and five USDA Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains were estimated for N2 fixation in soybean using the 15N isotope dilution technique. Strain USDA 110 was superior to the local isolates in nodulation and N2 fixation when inoculated onto soybean cv TGX 1497-ID in a Nigerian soil and could therefore be used as an inoculant for enhanced N2 fixation in soybean in Nigeria.  相似文献   

4.
The relationship between ureide N and N2 fixation was evaluated in greenhouse-grown soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) and lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) and in field studies with soybean. In the greenhouse, plant N accumulation from N2 fixation in soybean and lima bean correlated with ureide N. In soybean, N2 fixation, ureide N, acetylene reduction, and nodule mass were correlated when N2 fixation was inhibited by applying KNO3 solutions to the plants. The ureide-N concentrations of different plant tissues and of total plant ureide N varied according to the effectiveness of the strain of Bradyrhizobium japonicum used to inoculate plants. The ureide-N concentrations in the different plant tissues correlated with N2 fixation. Ureide N determinations in field studies with soybean correlated with N2 fixation, aboveground N accumulation, nodule weight, and acetylene reduction. N2 fixation was estimated by 15N isotope dilution with nine and ten soybean genotypes in 1979 and 1980, respectively, at the V9, R2, and R5 growth stages. In 1981, we investigated the relationship between ureide N, aboveground N accumulation, acetylene reduction, and nodule mass using four soybean genotypes harvested at the V4, V6, R2, R4, R5, and R6 growth stages. Ureide N concentrations of young stem tissues or plants or aboveground ureide N content of the four soybean genotypes varied throughout growth correlating with acetylene reduction, nodule mass, and aboveground N accumulation. The ureide-N concentrations of young stem tissues or plants or aboveground ureide-N content in three soybean genotypes varied across inoculation treatments of 14 and 13 strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum in 1981 and 1982, respectively, and correlated with nodule mass and acetylene reduction. In the greenhouse, results correlating nodule mass with N2 fixation and ureide N across strains were variable. Acetylene reduction in soybean across host-strain combinations did not correlate with N2 fixation and ureide N. N2 fixation, ureide N, acetylene reduction, and nodule mass correlated across inoculation treatments with strains of Bradyrhizobium spp. varying in effectiveness on lima beans. Our data indicate that ureide-N determinations may be used as an additional method to acetylene reduction in studies of the physiology of N2 fixation in soybean. Ureide-N measurements also may be useful to rank strains of B. japonicum for effectiveness of N2 fixation.  相似文献   

5.
A field study was conducted in lysimeters containing 15N-enriched soil to determine the effects of four competitive rhizobium strains upon yield parameters of pigeon peas (Cajanus cajan). The greatest differences observed were in seed yields; strain P132 effected the highest seed yield (121 ± 20 g per plant), and the control strain (indigenous rhizobia) effected the lowest yield (43.9 ± 8 g per plant). With the exception of seeds and pods, the dry matter weights were not different. Although there appeared to be no effect by inoculum strains on the fractional content of N derived from biological nitrogen fixation when the total plant biomass was considered, strains P132 and 401 partitioned more of the N derived from fixation into seeds and leaves than did the other strains. Because the seeds comprised the major portion of plant N, more total N and more N derived from biological nitrogen fixation (about half of total N) were found in plants inoculated with P132, whereas the smallest amount was found in the uninoculated controls. P132 was also the best competitor with respect to indigenous rhizobia and acounted for all of the nodules found on the plants in which it was inoculated.  相似文献   

6.
Pigeon peas (Cajanus cajan) were grown in large soil columns (90-cm length by 30-cm diameter) and inoculated with four different strains of cowpea rhizobia, which varied with respect to hydrogen uptake activity (Hup). Despite the profuse liberation of H2 from Hup- nodules in vitro, H2 gas was not detected in any of the soil columns. When H2 was injected into the columns, the rates of consumption were highest in the treatments (including control) containing Hup- nodules (218 and 177 nmol · h−1 · cm−2) and lowest in the Hup+ treatments (158, 92, and 64 nmoles · h−1 · cm−2). In situ H2 uptake rates in small soil cores at fixed distances from the nodules decreased exponentially with distance from the nodule (R2 = 0.99). This decrease in H2 consumption was associated with a similar decrease in numbers of H2-oxidizing chemolithotrophic bacteria as determined by the most-probable-number method. On the basis of two equations derived separately upon diffusive theory (Fix's Law) and kinetic theory (Michaelis-Menten), the empirically derived rate constants and coefficients indicated that all of the H2 emitted from Hup- nodules would be consumed by H2-oxidizing bacteria within a 3- to 4.5-cm radius of the nodule surface. It is concluded that H2 is not lost from the soil-plant ecosystem during N2 fixation in C. cajan but is conserved by H2-oxidizing bacteria.  相似文献   

7.

Background and Aims

Understanding the impact of soil rhizobial populations and inoculant rhizobia in supplying sufficient nodulation is crucial to optimising N2 fixation by legume crops. This study explored the impact of different rates of inoculant rhizobia and contrasting soil rhizobia on nodulation and N2 fixation in faba bean (Vicia faba L.).

Methods

Faba beans were inoculated with one of seven rates of rhizobial inoculation, from no inoculant to 100 times the normal rate of inoculation, sown at two field sites, with or without soil rhizobia present, and their nodulation and N2 fixation assessed.

Results

At the site without soil rhizobia, inoculation increased nodule number and increased N2 fixation from 21 to 129 kg shoot N ha?1, while N2 fixation increased from 132 to 218 kg shoot N ha?1 at the site with high background soil rhizobia. At the site without soil rhizobia, inoculation increased concentrations of shoot N from 14 to 24 mg g?1, grain N from 32 to 45 mg g?1, and grain yields by 1.0 Mg (metric tonne) ha?1. Differences in nodulation influenced the contributions of fixed N to the system, which varied from the net removal of 20 kg N ha?1 from the system in the absence of rhizobia, to a net maximum input of 199 kg N ha?1 from legume shoot and root residues, after accounting for removal of N in grain harvest.

Conclusions

The impact of inoculation and soil rhizobia strongly influenced grain yield, grain N concentration and the potential contributions of legume cropping to soil N fertility. In soil with resident rhizobia, N2 fixation was improved only with the highest inoculation rate.  相似文献   

8.
Hydrogen (H2) is a by-product of the symbiotic nitrogen fixation (N2 fixation) between legumes and root-nodule bacteria (rhizobia). Some rhizobial strains have an uptake hydrogenase enzyme (commonly referred to as Hup+) that recycles H2 within the nodules. Other rhizobia, described as Hup?, do not have the enzyme and the H2 produced diffuses from the nodules into the soil where it is consumed by microorganisms. The effect of this phenomenon on the soil biota and on the soil itself, and consequent stimulation of plant growth, has been demonstrated previously. Soybeans [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cv. Leichhardt, inoculated with either a Hup+ strain (CB1809) or one of two Hup? strains (USDA442 or USDA16) of Bradyrhizobium japonicum and uninoculated soybeans, plus a non-legume control [capsicum (Capsicum annuum L.)] were grown in the field at Ayr, North Queensland, Australia. The objectives were to examine (1) relationships between N2 fixation and H2 emission, and (2) the influence H2-induced changes in soil might have during the legume phase and/or on the performance of a following crop. Strains CB1809 and USDA442 were highly effective in N2 fixation (“good” fixers); USDA16 was partly effective (“poor” fixer). The soil had a large but non-uniformly distributed naturalised population of B. japonicum and most uninoculated control plants formed nodules that fixed some N2. These naturalised strains were classified as “poor fixers” of N2 and were Hup+. H2 emissions from nodules were assessed for all treatments when the soybean crop was 62 days old. Other parameters of symbiotic N2 fixation and plant productivity were measured when the crop was 62 and 96 days old and at crop maturity. Immediately after final harvest, the land was sown to a crop of maize (Zea mays L.) in order to determine the consequences of H2 emission from the soybean crop on maize growth. It was estimated that soybeans inoculated with USDA442, the highly effective Hup strain of B. japonicum, fixed 117 kg shoot N/ha (or about 195 kg total N/ha if the fixed N associated with roots and nodules was taken into account), and contributed about 215,000 l H2 gas per hectare to the ecosystem over the life of the crop. The volume of H2 evolved from soybeans nodulated by the Hup+ strain CB1809 was only 6% of that emitted by the USDA442 treatment, but there was no indication that soybean inoculated with USDA442 benefited from the additional H2 input. The shoot biomass, grain yield, and amounts of N fixed (105 kg shoot N/ha, 175 kg total N/ha) by the CB1809 treatment were little less than for USDA442 plants. Three days after the soybean crop was harvested, the plots were over-sown with maize along the same row lines in which the soybeans had grown. This procedure exposed the maize roots to whatever influence soybean H2 emission might have had on the soil and/or the soil microflora immediately surrounding soybean nodules. The evidence for a positive effect of soybean H2 emission on maize production was equivocal. While the consistent differences between those pre-treatments that emitted H2 and those that did not indicated a trend, only one difference (out of the 12 parameters of maize productivity that were measured) was statistically significant at P?<?0.05. The findings need substantiation by further investigation.  相似文献   

9.
Dinitrogen-fixing legumes are frequently assumed to be less water-use efficient than plants utilizing soil mineral N, because of the high respiratory requirements for driving N2 fixation. However, since respiration is assumed not to discriminate against 13C, any differences in water-use efficiency exclusively due to respiration should not be apparent in carbon isotope discrimination () values. Our objective was to determine if the source of N (N2 fixation versus soil N) had any effect on of field-grown grain legumes grown at different elevations. Four legume species, Glycine max, Phaseolus lunatus, P. vulgaris, and Vigna unguiculata, were grown on five field sites spanning a 633 m elevational gradient on the island of Maui, Hawaii. The legumes were either inoculated with a mixture of three effective strains of rhizobia or fertilized weekly with urea at 100 kg N ha-1 in an attempt to completely suppress symbiotic N2-fixing activity. In 14 of 20 analyses of stover and 12 of 15 analyses of seed values were significantly higher (p=0.10) in the inoculated plants than the N-fertilized plants. Nitrogen concentrations were generally higher in the fertilized treatments than the inoculated treatments. The different values obtained depending on N-source may have implications in using as an indicator of water-use efficiency or yield potential of legumes.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthesis, primary productivity, N content, and N2 fixation were determined as a function of applied NH4+ in peas (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) which were inoculated or not inoculated with Rhizobium leguminosarum. Cabon dioxide exchange rate (CER) increased 10-fold, total N content 7-fold, and total dry weight 3-fold in 26-day-old uninoculated plants as applied NH4+ was increased from 0 to 16 millimolar. In inoculated plants of the same age CER and dry weight were maximal at 2 millimolar NH4+, and total N content increased between 0 and 2 millimolar NH4+ but did not change significantly with higher NH4+ applications. Per cent N content of uninoculated plants was significantly lower than that of inoculated plants except at the highest NH4+ concentration (16 millimolar). Symbiotic N2 fixation by inoculated plants was maximal in peas grown with 2 millimolar NH4+; and apparent relative efficiency of N2 fixation, calculated from C2H2 reduction and H2 evolution, was maximal in the 2 to 4 millimolar NH4+ concentration range. The capacity to fix N2 through the Rhizobium-legume symbiosis significantly enhanced the rate and efficiency of photosynthesis and plant N content when NH4+ concentration in the nutrient solution was below 8 millimolar. Above 8 millimolar NH4+ concentration uninoculated plants had greater CER, N content, and dry weight.  相似文献   

11.
Inga edulis Mart. is a tropical legume tree used for shade in coffee and cacao plantations and as a hedgerow in alley-cropping practices. Little information can be found concerning N2 fixation in this species. This study was conducted to characterize the rhizobia of I. edulis and determine if it is capable of fixing substantial amounts of N2. Four strains of fast-growing, Gram-negative rhizobia-type bacteria were isolated from I. edulis nodules. The strains were identified by sequencing of partial 16S–23S rDNA internal spacer region. Nitrogenase activity was determined using acetylene reduction assay (ARA). Dinitrogen fixation was measured under controlled conditions by the 15N isotope dilution technique using two non-N2-fixing reference species, Vochysia guatemalensis Donn. Sm, and Gmelina arborea Roxb. ex. Sm. Seedlings were grown in three growth media: native soil and naturally N-depleted sand amended to a low and high N level. The four strains of symbiotic bacteria were closely related to Bradyrhizobium japonicum and to Bradyrhizobium liaoningense. Nodules demonstrated nitrogenase activity as measured by ARA. Vochysia guatemalensis was a better non-N2-fixing reference than G. arborea. When V. guatemalensis was used as the non-N2-fixing reference, the estimate of the percentage of N fixed from atmosphere out of total N in I. edulis seedlings was ca. 40 in the two sand media treatments and 10 in the native soil.  相似文献   

12.
The use of the relative ureide content of xylem sap [(ureide-N/total N) × 100] as an indicator of N2 fixation in soybeans (Merr.) was examined under greenhouse conditions. Acetylene treatments to inhibit N2 fixation were imposed upon the root systems of plants totally dependent upon N2 fixation as their source of N and of plants dependent upon both N2 fixation and uptake of exogenous nitrate. Significant decreases in the total N concentration of xylem sap from plants of the former type were observed, but no significant decrease was observed in the total N concentration of sap from the latter type of plants. In both types of plants, acetylene treatment caused significant decreases in the relative ureide content of xylem sap. The results provided further support for a link between the presence of ureides in the xylem and the occurrence of N2 fixation in soybeans. The relative ureide content of xylem sap from plants totally dependent upon N2 fixation was shown to be insensitive to changes in the exudation rate and total N concentration of xylem sap brought about by diurnal changes in environmental factors. There was little evidence of soybean cultivars or nodulating strains affecting the relative ureide content of xylem sap. `Ransom' soybeans nodulated with Rhizobium japonicum strain USDA 110 were grown under conditions to obtain plants exhibiting a wide range of dependency upon N2 fixation. The relative ureide content of xylem sap was shown to indicate reliably the N2 fixation of these plants during vegetative growth using a 15N method to measure N2 fixation activity. The use of the relative ureide content of xylem sap for quantification of N2 fixation in soybeans should be evaluated further.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrogen fixed in 13 provenances of Acacia albida and 11 isolines of Leucaena leucocephala inoculated with effective Rhizobium strains was measured by 15N techniques and the total N difference method. In the test soil, on the average, L. leucocephala derived about 65% of its total N from atmospheric N2 fixation compared to about 20% by A. albida. Significant differences in the percentage of N derived from atmospheric N2 (% Ndfa) occurred, between provenances or isolines within species. The % Ndfa ranged from 37 to 74% within L. leucocephala and from 6 to 37 within A. albida; (equivalent to 20–50 mg N plant–1 and 4–37 mg N plant–1 for the two species over three months, respectively) and was correlated with the nodule mass (r=0.91). The time course of N2 fixation of three selected provenances (low, intermediate and good fixers) was followed at 12 weekly intervals over a 36 week period. The % Ndfa of all provenances and isolines increased with time; and except for one of the L. leucocephala provenances, % Ndfa was similar within species at the 36 weeks harvest. There was a significant correlation between % Ndfa and the amount of N2 fixed (r=0.96). Significant interactions occurred between provenances and N treatments and often growth of uninoculated but N fertilized plants was less variable than for inoculated unfertilized plants.  相似文献   

14.
Plant genotypes of Trifolium subterraneum L. (subterranean clover) were evaluated for differences in symbiotic N2 fixation with soil rhizobia, with the long-term aim of using plant selection to overcome sub-optimal N2 fixation associated with poorly effective soil rhizobia. Symbiotic performance (SP) was assessed for 49 genotypes of subterranean clover with each of four pure Rhizobium strains isolated from soil. Plants were grown in N free media in the greenhouse and their shoot dry weights measured and expressed as a percentage of dry weight with R. leguminosarm bv. trifolii WSM1325, the recommended commercial inoculant. Average SP with two Rhizobium strains (H and J) ranged from completely ineffective to 80% of potential for the subterranean clover genotypes. Two clover cultivars with high (cv. Campeda) and low (cv. Clare) SP values were investigated in more detail. Campeda typically fixed more N2 than Clare when inoculated with 30 soil extracts (4.2 vs 2.4 mg N2 fixed/shoot) and with 14 pure strains isolated from those soils (4.2 vs 2.2 mg N2 fixed/shoot). The poor performance of Clare could be attributed to interruptions at multiple stages of the symbiotic association, from nodule initiation (less nodules), nodule development (small, white nodules), through to reduced nodule function (N2 fixed/mg nodule) depending on the inoculation treatment. Through the careful use of subterranean clover genotypes by plant breeders it should be possible to make significant gains in the SP of future subterranean clover cultivars.  相似文献   

15.
To estimate the N2 fixation ability of the alder (Alnus hirsuta (Turcz.) var. sibirica), we examined the seasonal variation in nitrogenase activity of nodules using the acetylene reduction method in an 18-year-old stand naturally regenerated after disturbance by road construction in Japan. To evaluate the contribution of N2 fixation to the nitrogen (N) economy in this alder stand, we also measured the phenology of the alder, the litterfall, the decomposition rate of the leaf litter, and N accumulation in the soil. The acetylene reduction activity per unit nodule mass (ARA) under field conditions appeared after bud break, peaked the maximum in midsummer after full expansion of the leaves, and disappeared after all leaves had fallen. There was no consistent correlation between ARA and tree size (dbh). The amount of N2 fixed in this alder stand was estimated at 56.4 kg ha?1 year?1 when a theoretical molar ratio of 3 was used to convert the amount of reduced acetylene to the amount of fixed N2. This amount of N2 fixation corresponded to the 66.4% of N in the leaf litter produced in a year. These results suggested that N2 fixation still contributed to the large portion of N economy in this alder stand.  相似文献   

16.
The adzuki bean (Vigna angularis (Wild.) Ohwi and Ohashi) and common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) have a high physiological demand for N. A 2-year field study was conducted to investigate the seasonal change of available soil N and symbiotic N2 fixation usage. The beans were seeded at two densities, 22.2 plants m–2 with a row spacing of 0.3 m and 11.1 plants m–2 with a row spacing of 0.6 m. The amount of fixed N2 in the shoot was calculated using the 15N natural abundance method. The common bean demonstrated low N2 fixation and the ability to accumulate high levels of soil N. Soil nitrate under the common bean was continually absorbed. The adzuki bean, on the other hand, had a remarkable peak of N accumulation in the early reproductive stage. This was mainly due to N2 fixation, though the soil nitrate level was high. Narrowing the plant row spacing increased the dry matter yield of both species, but the origin of the increased N differed between the species. For the first 77 DAP in 1999 (73 DAP in 2000) the N increase for both beans was due to both soil and atmospheric N2. At harvest, though, the increase of N in common bean was mainly due to soil N, while that in adzuki bean was mainly due to atmospheric N2. It can be concluded that the low symbiotic N2 fixation ability of common bean was due to its high soil N uptake ability and constant N accumulation, which enabled an efficient soil N absorption. Adzuki bean absorbed N mainly for a short period and depended more on symbiotically fixed N2 and, in contrast to common bean, left a high level of NO3-N remaining in the soil after cropping.  相似文献   

17.
It has previously been reported that endophytic diazotrophic bacteria contribute significantly to the nitrogen budgets of some graminaceous species. In this study the contribution of biological nitrogen fixation to the N-budget of a South African sugarcane cultivar was evaluated using 15N natural abundance, acetylene reduction and 15N incorporation. Plants were also screened for the presence of endophytic diazotrophic bacteria using acetylene reduction and nifH-gene targeted PCR with the pure bacterial strains. 15N natural abundance studies on field-grown sugarcane indicated that the plants did not rely extensively on biological nitrogen fixation. Furthermore, no evidence was found for significant N2-fixation or nitrogenase activity in field-grown or glasshouse-grown plants using 15N incorporation measurements and acetylene reduction assays. Seven endophytic bacterial strains were isolated from glasshouse-grown and field-grown plants and cultured on N-free medium. The diazotrophic character of these seven strains could not be confirmed using acetylene reduction and PCR screening for nifH. Thus, although biological nitrogen fixation may occur in South African sugarcane varieties, the contribution of this N-source in the tested cultivar was not significant.  相似文献   

18.
Guar (Cyamopsis tetregonoloba (L.) may be grown when soil temperatures are potentially high enough at the time of planting to inhibit nodulation and N2 fixation. An experiment was conducted using controlled conditions to determine the influence of high root temperature on growth and N2 fixation of guar. The experiment included two strains of rhizobia, two varieties of guar, two mineral N treatments, and root temperatures of 34, 37, and 40°C. Plants were grown for 44 days. The root temperature of 40°C reduced N fixation by at least 80% and nodule weight by more than 50%. Significant interactions occurred between most factors in influencing nodulation, N2 fixation and dry matter production. Guar, nodulated by rhizobial strain GAR022-1 and fully dependent on N2 fixation or provided with starter mineral N (25 mg pot–1), was not influenced by the root temperature of 37°C as compared to 34°C. Nodulation and N2 fixation by strain 32H1 was reduced by at least 40% when no starter mineral N was provided and the root temperature was 37°C. Providing starter mineral N to one variety of guar doubled the quantity of N2 fixed by strain 32H1 at both 34 and 37°C but N2 fixation was lower at the higher root temperature. It appears that root temperatures between 37° and 40°C bracketed the critical root temperature for N2 fixation by nodulated guar and that the critical root temperature for guar dependent on mineral N was above 40°C.  相似文献   

19.
The 15N methods are potentially accurate for measuring N2 fixation in plants. The only problem with those methods is, how to ensure that the 15N/14N ratio in the plant accurately reflects the integrated 15N/14N ratio (R) in soil which is variable in time and with soil depth. However, the consequences of using an inappropriate reference plant vary with the level of N2 fixation and the conditions under which the study was made. For example, the errors introduced into the values of N2 fixation are higher at low levels of fixation, and decrease with increasing rates of fixation. At very high N2 fixation rates, the errors are often insignificant. Also, the magnitude of error is proportional to the rate of decline of the 15N/14N ratio with time. Since N2 fixation in most plants would be expected to below 60%, the question of how to select a good reference plant is still pertinent. In this paper, we have discussed some of the criteria to adopt in selecting reference plants, e.g. how to ensure that the reference plant is not fixing N2, is absorbing most of its N from the same zone as the fixing plant, and in the same pattern with time, etc. In addition, we have discussed 15N labelling materials and methods that are likely to minimize any errors even when the fixing and reference plants don't match well in certain important criteria. The use of slow release 15N fertilizer or 15N labelled plant materials results in slow changes in the 15N/14N ratio of soil, and is strongly recommended. Where 15N inorganic fertilizers are used, the application of the fertilizer in small splits at various intervals is recommended over a one-time application. The problem with the reference crop, which has sometimes discouraged potential users of the 15N methods, is surmountable, as discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

20.
Biological nitrogen (N2) fixation performed by diazotrophs (N2 fixing bacteria) is thought to be one of the main sources of plant available N in pristine ecosystems like arctic tundra. However, direct evidence of a transfer of fixed N2 to non-diazotroph associated plants is lacking to date. Here, we present results from an in situ 15N–N2 labelling study in the High Arctic. Three dominant vegetation types (organic crust composed of free-living cyanobacteria, mosses, cotton grass) were subjected to acetylene reduction assays (ARA) performed regularly throughout the growing season, as well as 15N–N2 incubations. The 15N-label was followed into the dominant N2 fixer associations, soil, soil microbial biomass and non-diazotroph associated plants three days and three weeks after labelling. Mosses contributed most to habitat N2 fixation throughout the measuring campaigns, and N2 fixation activity was highest at the beginning of the growing season in all plots. Fixed 15N–N2 became quickly (within 3 days) available to non-diazotroph associated plants in all investigated vegetation types, proving that N2 fixation is an actual source of available N in pristine ecosystems.  相似文献   

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