Publication | Open Access
Influence of nitrogen source and concentration on nitrogen isotopic discrimination in two barley genotypes (<i>Hordeum vulgare</i>L.)
66
Citations
30
References
2003
Year
Plant GeneticsEngineeringBotanyGeneticsAgricultural EconomicsBarley GenotypesCrop PhysiologyCrop ImprovementNitrogen NutritionPlant NutritionNitrogen SourceUnlimited NitrogenBiogeochemistryQuantitative GeneticsNitrogen Isotope DiscriminationGenetic VariationPlant MetabolismBiologyCrop ScienceNitrogen Isotopic DiscriminationMedicinePlant Physiology
ABSTRACT The occurrence of nitrogen isotope discrimination with absorption and assimilation of nitrate (NO 3 – ) and ammonium (NH 4 + ) was investigated using two genotypes of barley, Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Steptoe and Az12 : Az70, the latter of which lacks the characterized nitrate reductase isozymes. Plants were grown under two situations: a closed system with limited nitrogen or an open system with unlimited nitrogen, to elucidate the conditions and processes that influence discrimination. There was no discrimination observed for Az12 : Az70 when supplied with limited nitrogen. Discrimination was observed for Steptoe seedlings at high external NO 3 – concentrations, but not with low NO 3 – when assimilation is probably rapid and complete. The same pattern was observed for Steptoe when NH 4 + was supplied; indicating that for both nitrogen forms discrimination is dependent upon the presence of the assimilatory enzyme and the external concentration. The implications of this study are that both internal (assimilatory enzyme distribution) and external (source concentration) factors may have a larger impact on tissue δ 15 N than the form of nitrogen utilized. This suggests that tissue δ 15 N may not always be a reliable indicator of a plant's integrated nitrogen nutrition.
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