Author/Authors :
A. S. Heagle، نويسنده , , J. E. Miller، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Two white clover (Trifolium repens L.) clones with varying sensitivity to O3 are being developed as a system to indicate effects of ambient concentrations of tropospheric O3 on plants. One clone (NC-S) is highly sensitive to O3 and the other (NC-R) is highly resistant. The system relies on periodic measurement of foliar injury, foliar chlorophyll, and forage production of NC-S and NC-R grown in 15-liter pots throughout a summer season. Relative amounts of foliar injury and ratios (NC-S/NC-R) for chlorophyll and forage weight can be used to estimate biologically effective ambient O3 concentrations. The effect of variation in rooting media formulation and fertilizer rate on response of NC-S and NC-R to ambient O3 was determined in the present study. In the rooting medium experiment, clover was grown in three mixtures of sandy loam topsoil:course washed sand:Metro Mix 220 (ratios (by volume) of 2:1:1, 2:1:5, and 6:1:1). In the fertilizer experiment, clover was grown in the 2:1:1 medium at four fertilizer rates (soluble 5-11-26 (N-P-K) at 0.0, 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 g per pot). Ozone caused more foliar injury, more chlorosis, and a greater decrease in forage production of NC-S than of NC-R in all studies. Rooting media treatments affected both clones similarly and occasional clone x media interactions were judged to be random. Forage production by NC-S, relative to that of NC-R, was generally greater in the 0.0 fertilizer treatment, but the forage ratios were similar at all other fertilizer treatments. The relative response of NC-S and NC-R to O3 is fairly stable under cultural conditions that support normal plant growth.