Increase of natural 15N enrichment of soybean nodules with mean nodule mass

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Abstract

The 15N abundance of soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill var Harosoy) nodules is usually greater than it is for other tissues or for atmospheric N2. Results of experiments in which nodules were separated by size show that the magnitude of the 15N enrichment is correlated with nodule mass. The results support the hypothesis that 15N enrichment of nodules results from differential N isotopic fractionation for synthesis of nodule tissue venus synthesis of compounds for export from the nodule. The physiological significance of this hypothesis is that it requires that a substantial fraction of the N for nodule tissue synthesis in 15N-enriched nodules be N recently fixed within the same nodule.

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Shearer, G., Bryan, B. A., & Kohl, D. H. (1984). Increase of natural 15N enrichment of soybean nodules with mean nodule mass. Plant Physiology, 76(3), 743–746. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.76.3.743

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