Seed and pod development of autumn-sown, determinate white lupins (Lupinusalbus) in relation to the assimilation and distribution of dry matter and nitrogen in crops grown at different densities

Citation
Gfj. Milford et al., Seed and pod development of autumn-sown, determinate white lupins (Lupinusalbus) in relation to the assimilation and distribution of dry matter and nitrogen in crops grown at different densities, J AGR SCI, 133, 1999, pp. 141-150
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture/Agronomy
Journal title
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
ISSN journal
00218596 → ACNP
Volume
133
Year of publication
1999
Part
2
Pages
141 - 150
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8596(199909)133:<141:SAPDOA>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Pod and seed growth were studied in two experiments in which the plant's so urce-sink relationships were modified by (a) manually pruning an autumn-sow n, indeterminate white lupin variety, Lunoble, to a determinate form, and ( b) by growing a determinate variety, Lucyane, at densities ranging from 7 t o 35 plants/m(2). The pruning experiments indicated that the faster pod gro wth rate of determinate genotypes was not an inherent genetic trait but an indirect physiological consequence of the plant's changed architecture. In the density experiment, crop dry matter (DM) and nitrogen (N) were maximum at the end of pod extension in late July and similar across the plant densi ty range at c. 12 t DM and 320 kg N/ha. Therefore, the amount of dry matter per plant decreased proportionately with the increase in plant number. The DM and N contents of the pod walls were also maximum at the end of pod ext ension, but seeds contained only a third of their final DM and a quarter of their final N. Protein accumulation during the final stages of seed growth , therefore, depended on the remobilization of nitrogen from other plant or gans, primarily the leaves and pod walls. Nitrogen withdrawn from the leave s accounted for 44 % of the gain in the pods, and N withdrawn from pod wall s for 50-60 % of the gain in the seed. Seed number/m(2) was the major yield component. Seeds and pods mainly abort ed during early development, but seed number per pod was also decreased by some seed abortion after full pod extension, especially in first-order pods of plants grown at high density. The number of late-aborted seeds was nega tively correlated with the amount of N remobilized from the pod wall. In de terminate lupins, which have highly synchronous flowering and pod developme nt, the large and sudden remobilization of nitrogen from leaves and pod wal ls for seed growth and protein accumulation triggered crop senescence.