Associative N2-fixation in plants growing in saline sodic soils and its relative quantification based on15N natural abundance

1991 ◽  
Vol 137 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Malik ◽  
Rakhshanda Bilal ◽  
G. Rasul ◽  
K. Mahmood ◽  
M. I. Sajjad
1995 ◽  
Vol 46 (7) ◽  
pp. 1401 ◽  
Author(s):  
RR Gault ◽  
MB Peoples ◽  
GL Turner ◽  
DM Lilley ◽  
J Brockwell ◽  
...  

Nodulation, N2 fixation (estimated by 15N natural abundance methods) and dry matter production were studied in a lucerne (Medicago sativa) crop managed for hay production at Ginninderra Experiment Station, A.C .T. Measurements were taken in the year of establishment and during two subsequent growing seasons. There were three treatments: (1) no inoculation and no annual fertilizer applied, (2) initial inoculation and superphosphate applied annually, (3) no inoculation, superphosphate applied annually and ammonium sulfate periodically. Before planting and after each growth season, soil was analysed for extractable mineral nitrogen, total nitrogen and the 15N natural abundance of this nitrogen, to the depth explored by lucerne roots. Before planting, no appropriate root-nodule bacteria (Rhizobium meliloti) were detected in the soil and initially plants were nodulated only in the inoculated treatment. Thereafter nodulation increased on the other treatments. Eight months after sowing there were no differences between treatments in numbers of R. meliloti g-l soil or in nodulation. In the third growing season, almost 30 kg ha-1 (dry wt) of nodules were recovered to a depth of 25 cm. These nodules were primarily located on fine, ephemeral roots and many appeared to be renewed after cutting of the lucerne. In the year of establishment, dry matter yields (0% moisture) totalled 3 to 4 t ha-1 in three hay cuts. In succeeding years, total yields were in the range 10 to 13 t ha-1 in four or five cuts per season. Nitrogen removed in the harvested lucerne reached 340 to 410 kg N ha-lyr-l in the second and third years and between 65 and 96% of this N arose from N2 fixation, depending on the method of calculation used. Poorer dry matter production and N2 fixation in treatment 1 in the third growing season was attributed to an insufficient supply of available phosphorus. Fixed N removed in Lucerne hay from treatment 2 totalled at least 640 kg N ha-1 in the three years of the experiment. Also, there were substantial increases in soil nitrogen due to lucerne growth. Although soil compaction made the quantification difficult, at the end of the experiment it was estimated that there was at least an extra 800 kg N ha-1 in the total soil nitrogen under lucerne compared to strips of Phalaris aquatica grown between the lucerne plots. It was concluded that lucerne contributed at least the same amount of fixed nitrogen to the soil as was being removed in the harvested hay.


1988 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 407 ◽  
Author(s):  
FJ Bergersen ◽  
MB Peoples ◽  
GL Turner

Soybeans were grown in a glasshouse in sand-vermiculite medium supplied daily with a mineral nutrient solution essentially free of combined N or containing 5 mM nitrate of known 15N abundance. The natural abundance of 15N in parts of plants and in nitrogen remaining in the medium was determined from 15 days after planting until fruiting. In nodulated plants completely dependent on N2 fixation for growth, the δ15N of plant nitrogen was uniformly negative at 56 days (overall mean: -0.90� 0.17) after adjustment for the effect of seed nitrogen. The δ15N of root nodules increased with time (max. 9.6‰), as that of shoots declined (min. - 1.3 ‰). The δ15N of every mainstem trifoliolate leaf and of the first (unifoliolate) leaf declined from initially positive values (0.5 to 2 ‰) to about - 2‰ with similar time courses, irrespective of the time of initiation. There were no significant losses of N from the plants during growth. There were differences between the δ15N of the total N of root-bleeding xylem sap and of sap extracted by vacuum treatment of stems. These were due to differences between the proportions of ureide-N and amino-N and between the δ15N values of these components. When nodulated plants were supplied daily with 5 mM nitrate (δ15N = 7.68‰) between 21 and 35 days, N2 fixation was reduced to 63% of N assimilated but growth and accumulation of nitrogen were affected little. Following removal of nitrate, there were changes in growth which led to enhanced nodulation and N2 fixation. The δ15N of the total N of trifoliolate leaves which were initiated or expanded before or during the period of nitrate treatment remained positive; those expanded or initiated after the treatment became negative in δ15N, as in the corresponding leaves of untreated nodulated plants. The δ15N of nodules was unaffected by the nitrate treatment. In plants (non-nod. Clark '63) supplied continuously with nitrate, the δ15N of the total N of entire plants rose quickly from values for seeds, but to values significantly higher than in the nitrate. These results are discussed in relation to the effects on the use of 15N natural abundance data for estimating utilisation of atmospheric N2 by nodulated plants.


1994 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 477-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keuk-Ki Lee ◽  
Suhas Pralhad Wani ◽  
Tadakatsu Yoneyama ◽  
Nunna Trimurtulu ◽  
Ramasubramani Harikrishnan

1995 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 225 ◽  
Author(s):  
JA Doughton ◽  
PG Saffigna ◽  
I Vallis ◽  
RJ Mayer

The 15N enrichment and 15N natural abundance methods for estimating N2 fixation in chickpea were compared over a range of soil NO3-N levels at crop establishment varying from 10 to 326 kg N/ha (0-120 cm depth). Barley was used as a non-N2 fixing control crop. Both methods estimated reduced N2 fixation as soil NO3-N levels at crop establishment increased. Similar estimates of % N2 fixation were obtained at high values, but at low values the enrichment method gave lower estimates, some of which were negative. The 15N natural abundance method provided realistic estimates of % N2 fixation across all soil N03-N levels at crop establishment. An asymptotic curve described a close ( R2 = 0.95) relationship between these factors. Standard errors of estimates of means for the 15N natural abundance method remained acceptable and relatively stable over the full range of measurements; however, with the 15N enrichment method they became unacceptably large at low values of % N2 fixation. These large errors may have been partly due to legume and control plants assimilating mineral N of differing 15N enrichment. High mineral N levels associated with low values of % N2 fixation were also shown to reduce reliability of N2 fixation values estimated by the 15N enrichment method. These errors caused potentially greater inaccuracy at low values of % N2 fixation than at high values. To compare N2 fixation means statistically, transformations were necessary to stabilize variance and to impart lower weightings to plots with low values of % N2 fixation.


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