Nitrogen-15 labeling effectiveness of two tropical legumes
Nitrogen-15 foliar applications for the production of field-labeled plant tissues may achieve more effective labeling of plant shoot and root tissues and minimize directly labeling the soil N fraction as occurs when ¹⁵N is soil applied. Consequently, foliar-labeled plant tissues should be better sui...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant and soil 1998-03, Vol.200 (2), p.149-156 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nitrogen-15 foliar applications for the production of field-labeled plant tissues may achieve more effective labeling of plant shoot and root tissues and minimize directly labeling the soil N fraction as occurs when ¹⁵N is soil applied. Consequently, foliar-labeled plant tissues should be better suited for subsequent ¹⁵N mineralization studies. A field experiment was conducted to determine the effectiveness of ¹⁵N-labeling and the accumulation of ¹⁵N in various plant parts of two tropical legumes. Desmodium ovalifolium Guillemin and Perrottet and Pueraria phaseoloides (Roxb.) Benth., grown in 0.5 m² microplots, were labeled with foliar-applied urea containing 99 atom% ¹⁵N. Plants in each microplot received a total of 0.1698 g ¹⁵N that was applied all at once or split equally into two, three or four applications. Legume shoots and roots and soil were destructively harvested and analyzed for total ¹⁵N content. Averaged over both legumes and foliar application rates, total plant (shoots, flowers, leaf litter, and roots) recovery was approximately 79% of the ¹⁵N applied. The soil contained 3% of the ¹⁵N applied, of which 2.5 and 0.5% were in the inorganic and organic fractions, respectively. Nitrogen-15 recovery in shoots (76%) was sixty-five fold greater than in roots (1%) and about nineteen fold greater than the sum of roots and soil (4.1%), a much greater percent recovery than observed in other foliar labeling studies. Averaged over all four foliar splitapplication rates, ¹⁵N recovery by Desmodium shoots was greater than Pueraria. Results demonstrate that ¹⁵N foliar application to legumes is an effective method for labeling, resulting in atom% excess ¹⁵N levels and ¹⁵N recoveries comparable to those reported with the more traditional soil-labeling approach. Another advantage of this method is a nondestructive, in situ labeling method that permits separation of shoot and root residual N contribution to subsequent crops in N tracer studies. |
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ISSN: | 0032-079X 1573-5036 |
DOI: | 10.1023/A:1004330514833 |