Author:
McNeill Ann M.,Zhu Chunya,Fillery Ian R. P.
Abstract
A leaf-feeding technique for
in situ 15N-labelling of intact
soil–pasture plant systems was assessed, using subterranean clover
(Trifolium subterraneum L.) and serradella
(Ornithopus compressus L.) grown under glasshouse
conditions. Total recoveries of fed 15N were
87–100% following leaf-feeding of plants at flowering but were
lower (74–84%) following the feed at the vegetative stage.
Below-ground recovery of fed 15N ranged from 7 to
26%, with serradella partitioning a greater proportion of labelled N
below ground than subterranean clover. Additionally, plants of both species
fed at the vegetative stage accumulated a greater proportion of the
15N label below ground than did those fed at flowering.
Dry sampling procedures, which utilised freeze-drying, enabled fractionation
of the below-ground portion of the system into ‘clean’ nodulated
macro-roots with no adhering soil, residual uncleaned root, rhizosphere, and
bulk soil. Calculated specific enrichment for the ‘clean’ roots at
different depths demonstrated a relatively uniform distribution of
15N label in the subterranean clover roots, whereas the
presence of large indeterminate nodules in the crown region of serradella
roots contributed to apparent uneven distribution of label. Approximately half
of the N in the residual fraction of both species consisted of labelled
material, postulated to be mostly fine root. Additionally, 5–20%
of the rhizosphere N and 0·5–3% of the N in bulk soil was
legume root-derived, with some 15N detected in the
extractable total soluble N and microbial N pools. Rhizodeposition of N
represented approximately 10% of total plant N and 17–24%
of total below-ground N for subterranean clover, whereas values for serradella
were 20 and 34–37%, respectively. Estimated total below-ground N
of subterranean clover reached a maximum value of 177 mg N/plant at 98
days after sowing, which corresponded with a peak shoot N of 243 mg N. Maximum
below-ground N for serradella attained 196 mg N/plant 84 days after sowing
with a corresponding shoot biomass of 225 mg N. There was a decline in the
total below-ground N of serradella at maturity. Overall, recovered clean root
N represented 30–62% of estimated total below-ground N, so it was
concluded that standard root recovery procedures might be likely to
underestimate severely the total below-ground N accretion and N turnover by
legumes. The implications of these results for field estimation of total
legume N yield, biological N fixation, and the N benefit from legumes in
rotations are discussed.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
153 articles.
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