Abstract: | Effects of root temperatures, ranging from 1035 °C, on growth and nitrate inflow of fodder rape seedlings (cv.Emerald) were examined. These were cultured in solution, withtheir shoots held at 25 ° C. Nitrate inflow (uptake rateper unit root length) was little affected over the temperaturerange 1030 ° C, although enhanced values were foundat 35 ° C. Nitrate absorption by roots at 10-30 ° Cdepleted solution concentrations to an apparent minimum of approximately6.0 µM NO3. Relative growth rates were highestwith root temperatures of 25 ° C and 30 °C, and thesewere associated with the greatest nitrate depletion rates fromsolution. Root: shoot weight ratios were also greatest at 25°C and 30 °C. At 10 °C and 35 °C a relativelylarge shoot on a small root maintained nitrate inflow in spiteof the plants' slow growth rate. The nitrogen concentrationin the shoots was little affected by root temperature. Slowgrowth at a root temperature of 10 °C was not associatedwith a shortage of nitrogen in the shoots. The principal influenceof temperature appears to be on extension and differentiationof root tissues, possibly through effects on carbohydrate supplyto root meristems. |