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Copper Supply in Relation to Content and Redistribution of Copper Among Organs of the Wheat Plant
Authors:LONERAGAN  J F; SNOWBALL  K; ROBSON  A D
Institution:School of Environmental and Life Sciences, Murdoch University Murdoch, 6153 Western Australia
Department of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, Institute of Agriculture, University of Western Australia Nedlands, 6153 Western Australia
Abstract:The relationship of copper supply to the content and movementof copper among organs of wheat plants was examined at sevenstages in their growth from seedlings to maturity on a copperdeficient sand. In the absence of copper (Cu0), plants becameseverely copper deficient and produced no grain; developmentof tillers, leaves, stems, and inflorescences was delayed andgrowth of roots strongly depressed; leaf senescence was retardedand tiller growth was prolonged. Application of a marginal supplyof copper (Cu1) overcame all symptoms and promoted growth andgrain production. Increasing copper supply eightfold (Cu2) didnot change vegetative or grain production. Copper concentrations in stems, individual leaves, and wholetops were highest and responded most strongly to copper supplywhen they were young. As they aged, Cu1 and Cu2 leaves lostcopper rapidly; the first Cu0 leaves retained their copper andremained healthy for more than 7 weeks even though younger leavesdeveloped severe copper deficiency. In all treatments, lossof copper from the oldest leaf paralleled senescence and theloss of nitrogen. It is suggested that copper does not move out of plant leavesuntil they lose organic nitrogen compounds. As a result, copperbehaves in non-senescent leaves as if it is not mobile in plantphloem. But under conditions favouring senescence, copper ishighly mobile: in the present experiment, 67 per cent of thecopper present in vegetative organs of the Cu2 primary shootat flowering moved from them during grain development and thiscould account for all of the copper found in the grain at maturity. The retention of copper by leaves before senescence, its rapidloss during senescence, and the effect of copper deficiencyin delaying senescence resulted in the oldest leaf of severelydeficient Cu0 plants in the present experiment having a highercopper concentration than that of copper adequate Cu1 and Cu2plants. This behaviour could account for the many reports ofanomalous C-shaped ‘Piper-Steenbjerg’ curves inthe relationship of yield to copper concentrations in planttops. The coupling of copper movement from leaves to nitrogenmovement can also account for the unusually high values reportedfor critical concentrations of copper in tops of plants givenhigh levels of nitrogen fertilizers. Old organs should not be included in samples for diagnosis ofcopper deficiency. Only young organs should be used. In thepresent experiment, the copper concentration of young leavesgave a good indication of the copper status of wheat: a valueof 1 µg g–1 in young leaves indicated copper deficiency. copper, nitrogen, phloem transport, mineral transport, deficiency diagnosis, wheat, Triticum aestivum L.
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