Publication | Closed Access
Alterations in internal partitioning of carbon in soybean plants in response to nitrogen stress
87
Citations
21
References
1984
Year
Carbon SequestrationBiogeochemistryNonnodulated Soybean PlantsEngineeringBotanyPlant-soil InteractionPlant StressPlant-abiotic InteractionAgricultural EconomicsSoybean PlantsPlant NutritionInternal PartitioningPlant Growth RegulatorPhotosynthesisLimited Nitrogen SupplyPlant PhysiologyCarbon Allocation
Alterations in internal partitioning of carbon were evaluated in plants exposed to limited nitrogen supply. Vegetative, nonnodulated soybean plants (Glycine max (L.) Merrill, 'Ransom') were grown for 21 days with 1.0 mM NO3- and then exposed to solutions containing 1.0, 0.1, or 0.0 mM NO3- for a 25-day treatment period. In nitrogen-limited plants, there were decreases in emergence of new leaves and in the expansion rate and final area at full expansion of individual leaves. As indicated by alterations in accumulation of dry weight, a larger proportion of available carbon in the plant was partitioned to the roots with decreased availability of nitrogen. Partitioning of reduced nitrogen to the root also was increased and, in plants devoid of an external supply, considerable redistribution of reduced nitrogen from leaves to the root occurred. The general decrease in growth potential and sink strength for nutrients in leaves of nitrogen-limited plants suggested that factors other than simply availability of nitrogen likely were involved in the restriction of growth in the leaf canopy and the associated increase in carbon allocation to the roots.
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