Abstract
• The impact of nitrogen (N) supply on the temperature response of root respiratory O2 uptake (R) was assessed in several herbaceous species grown in solution culture. Warm-grown (25 : 20°C, day:night) plants differing in root N concentration were shifted to 13 : 8°C for 7 d to cold-acclimate. • Log-log plots of root R vs root N concentration both showed that R increased with increasing tissue N concentration, irrespective of the growth temperature. Although the regression slopes of the log-log plots did not differ between the warm-grown and cold-acclimated plants, cold-acclimated plants did exhibit a higher y-axis intercept than their warm-grown counterparts. This suggests that cold acclimation of root R is not entirely dependent on cold-induced increases in tissue N concentration and that scaling relationships (i.e. regression equations fitted to the log-log plots) between root R and N concentration are not fixed. • No systematic differences were found in the short-term Q10 (proportional change in R per 10°C change in temperature), or degree of cold acclimation (as measured by the proportional difference between warm- and cold-acclimated roots) among roots differing in root N concentration. The temperature response of root R is therefore insensitive to tissue N concentration. • The insensitivity of Q 10 values and acclimation to tissue N concentration raises the possibility that root R and its temperature sensitivity can be predicted for a range of N supply scenarios. © The Authors (2006).
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Atkinson, L. J., Hellicar, M. A., Fitter, A. H., & Atkin, O. K. (2007). Impact of temperature on the relationship between respiration and nitrogen concentration in roots: An analysis of scaling relationships, Q10 values and thermal acclimation ratios. New Phytologist, 173(1), 110–120. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.2006.01891.x
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