Abstract
A glasshouse experiment examined the effect of water stress on the growth of
Lupinus angustifolius L. and
Lupinus pilosus Murr. grown on an acid sandy soil, a
limed sandy soil and an alkaline clay soil. Decreasing soil water content
decreased the stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rate, and reduced plant
growth. The responses of both species to water stress were generally similar
in the sand and limed soils, but in the alkaline soil,
L. angustifolius grown with limited water had markedly
lower conductances and photosynthetic rates than the plants in the other soils
at equivalent soil water contents. In adequately watered plants, the lupin
species differed substantially in their growth response to soil types. Whereas
the growth of L. pilosus was unaffected, the shoot dry
weight of L. angustifolius grown on the limed and
alkaline soils for 25–44 days was reduced by 32–54 and
44–86%, respectively, compared with the growth in the acid soil.
The poor growth of L. angustifolius appeared to be
primarily due to its poor root growth. In the alkaline soil, water stress
reduced rather than stimulated root growth. The results suggest that, in the
field, the limited root growth of L. angustifolius on
alkaline soils will exacerbate water deficits when the topsoil dries out in
the latter part of the season.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
26 articles.
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