The strategy of the wheat plant in acclimating growth and grain production to nitrogen availability

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Abstract

Two cultivars of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were grown to maturity in hydroponic cultures. Nitrogen accumulation was controlled by daily growth-limiting additions of nitrate together with all other nutrients in excess. Six different curves of N accumulation were used, with the same relative changes from day to day, but with different amplitudes. These curves were obtained by using the same mathematic formula of the N accumulation curves but varying the value of initial N content. The total amount of nitrogen added varied from 20 mg plant-1 to 65 mg plant-1. Plant bioproductivity showed a linear response to accumulated N. The number of grains per plant increased linearly with increased N availability whereas grain weights were essentially unaffected. Grain N concentrations and N content varied slightly, with highest values generally at the lower N availability levels. The quantitatively most important response to increased N availability was an increased number of earbearing tillers per plant. This varied from 0.1 tiller plant-1 at maturity when given 20 mg N plant-1, up to about 2 tillers plant-1 when given 65 mg N plant-1. Not all tillers that were initiated developed ears. The reduction of tillers seems to be one important mechanism in adapting plant productivity to N availability. Other individual characters influenced by N availability were straw height and the number of spikelets per spike. The two cultivars behaved in a qualitatively similar manner over the range of N availability even though they quantitatively differed in grain size, N concentrations and yield.

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APA

Oscarson, P. (2000). The strategy of the wheat plant in acclimating growth and grain production to nitrogen availability. Journal of Experimental Botany, 51(352), 1921–1929. https://doi.org/10.1093/jexbot/51.352.1921

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