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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems 1 (1980), S. 227-234 
    ISSN: 1573-0867
    Keywords: height ; osmotic potential ; stomatal resistance ; thermocouple psychrometer ; water potential ; winter wheat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. em. Thell. ‘Osage’) was grown in the greenhouse with fertilizer (urea ammonium phosphate, 28-28-0, 200 kg ha−1) placed in strips with the seed at planting or broadcasted before planting and worked into the surface of the soil to determine how severe osmotic injury is with stripped (banded) compared to broadcasted fertilizer. Control plants grew with no fertilizer. The soil was a Kirkland clay loam (Udertic Paleustoll). In addition to osmotic potential, water potential, stomatal resistance, and height were measured during the experiment. At harvest, vegetative yield and elemental composition of the shoots and roots were- determined. During the first 20 days after planting, the osmotic potential, as well as the water potential, of plants with fertilizer placed in strips was 2 to 3 bars lower, and the stomatal resistance was 2 to 3 s cm−1 higher, than those of plants grown with the broadcaster fertilizer. Leaves of plants with the stripped fertilizer had 12% more N and 42% more P than leaves of plants grown with the broadcasted fertilizer. Because plants grown with stripped fertilizer had a lower final dry weight, shoots with the stripped fertilizer had — 14% less total N, but + 8% more total P, than shoots grown with the broadcasted fertilizer. The results showed that, 20 days after planting, the osmotic potentials of plants grown with fertilizer placed in strips or broadcasted were the same and that there was an increase in efficiency of fertilizer use with placed P.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Planta 152 (1981), S. 319-324 
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Nitrate influx (efflux, metabolism) ; Pennisetum ; Zea
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Maize (Zea mays L.) and pearl millet (Pennisetum americanum (L.) Leeke) seedlings were exposed to [15N]nitrate for 1-h periods at eight times during a 24-h period (16–8 h light-dark for maize; 14–10 h for millet). Influx of [15N]nitrate as well as its reduction and translocation were determined during each period. The efflux of previously absorbed [14N]nitrate to the uptake solution was also estimated. No marked diurnal changes in [14N]nitrate efflux or [15N]nitrate influx were evident in maize. In contrast, [14N]nitrate efflux from millet increased and eventually exceeded [15N]nitrate influx during the late dark and early light periods, resulting in net nitrate efflux from the roots. The dissimilarity of their diurnal patterns indicates that influx and efflux are independently regulated. In both species, [15N]nitrate reduction and 15N translocation to shoots were curtailed more by darkness than was [15N]nitrate influx. In the light, maize reduced 15% and millet 24% of the incoming [15N]nitrate. In darkness, reduction dropped to 11 and 17%, respectively. Since the accumulation of reduced-15N in shoots declined abruptly in darkness, whereas that in roots was little affected, it is suggested that in darkness [15N]nitrate reduction occurred primarily in roots. The decrease in nitrate uptake and reduction in darkness was not related to efflux, which remained constant in maize and did not respond immediately to darkness in pearl millet.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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