Publication | Open Access
The Inhibition of Soybean Metabolism by Cadmium and Lead
151
Citations
11
References
1974
Year
EngineeringBotanyFood ChemistryHeavy MetalsToxicologyPlant NutritionPhotosynthesisHealth SciencesBiogeochemistryPeak Photosynthesis ActivityEcotoxicologyPhytotoxicityPlant MetabolismEnvironmental EngineeringBioactive MetalPhysiologyMetal ToxicityEnvironmental ToxicologyMetabolismSoybean MetabolismPlant Physiology
Lead (300 mum) and cadmium (18 mum) inhibit pod fresh weight in soybeans (Glycine max L.) by 35%. Eighteen micromolar cadmium caused a 30% decline in nitrogenase activity by day 52 (the day on which maximum activity was measured) and a 71% inhibition by day 59. The heavy metals depressed photosynthetic rates; when photosynthesis was depressed by 60%, as measured on the day of peak photosynthesis activity, carbohydrate did not accumulate in the nodules. The reduction of pod fresh weight correlated with the effect of lead and cadmium on several other aspects of plant metabolism (shoot, root, leaf, and nodule dry weight; nodule ammonia, protein and carbohydrate content).
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