Title of article :
Competition for amino acids between wheat roots and rhizosphere microorganisms and the role of amino acids in plant N acquisition
Author/Authors :
Owen، نويسنده , , A.G. Douglas-Jones، نويسنده , , D.L، نويسنده ,
Pages :
7
From page :
651
To page :
657
Abstract :
The direct uptake of organic nitrogen compounds from the soil solution by plant roots has been hypothesised to constitute a significant source of N to the plant particularly in N limiting ecosystems. The experiments undertaken here were designed to test whether wheat roots could out-compete the rhizosphere microflora for a pulse addition of organic N in the form of three contrasting amino acids, namely lysine, glycine and glutamate. Amino acids were added at a concentration reflecting reported soil solution concentrations (100 μM) and the uptake into either plant biomass or respiration or microbial biomass and respiration determined over a 24 h chase period. The results showed that the plant roots could only capture on average 6% of the added amino acid with the remainder captured by the microbial biomass. We therefore present direct in vivo evidence to support earlier work which has hypothesised that organic N may be of only limited consequence in high input agricultural systems. We suggest that this is a result of the higher concentrations of NO3− in agricultural soil solutions, the slow movement of amino acids in soil relative to NO3−, the rapid turnover of amino acids by soil microorganisms, and the poor competitive ability of plant roots to capture amino acids from the soil solution.
Keywords :
dissolved organic nitrogen , Rhizosphere , Plant-microbial competition , amino acids
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
1992697
Link To Document :
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