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Dinitrogen Fixation Measured by <sup>15</sup>N Isotope Dilution in Two Canadian Soybean Cultivars<sup>1</sup>
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1982
Year
BiogeochemistryDinitrogen Fixation MeasuredEngineeringCrop ProductionBotanySustainable AgricultureCrop ScienceCrop ProtectionAgricultural EconomicsPercent Plant NPlant PathologyN 2Plant NutritionN FertilizerCrop ImprovementCrop PhysiologyPublic HealthPlant Physiology
Abstract Adapted cultivars must be developed if significant production of soybeans [ Glycine max (L.) Merr.] is to be realized in western Canada. Selection and breeding for ability to support symbiotic N 2 fixation is important in this development. 15 N isotope dilution techniques were used to determine the percent plant N derived from the atmosphere (%Ndfa), i.e., fixation, and actual amounts of N fixed by two promising cultivars, X005 and Maple Presto. Precent Ndfa for the two cultivars was almost identical under comparable conditions. Depending on soil type and plant growth stage, %Ndfa varied from 38 to 70% in lysimeter experiments and maximized at 67% in the field. X005 fixed significantly more N 2 (115 kg N/ha) than Maple Presto (82 kg N/ha) in the field because X005 had a higher N yield, possibly due to a slightly longer growing season. The N yield of both cultivars, when inoculated, did not respond to increasing rates of fertilizer N [Ca (NO 3 ) 2 ]. The highest percent fertilizer use efficiency (%FUE) was 51% when uninoculated and 44% when the seed was inoculated. Although N 2 fixation occurred in both cultivars when fertilizer up to 160 kg N/ha was provided, the cultivars differed in their tolerance to fertilizer N with respect to N 2 fixation. For X005, N 2 fixation was constant as N fertilizer increased from 0 to 80 kg/ha but decreased by 24% where 160 kg N/ha was applied. For Maple Presto, N 2 fixation was constant as N fertilizer increased from 0 to 40 kg/ha but decreased by 21% where 80 or 160 kg N/ha was applied. Both cultivars had similar %Ndfa and amount of N fixed/ha to soybeans in other countries.