GROWTH AND ROOT NO3- AND PO43- UPTAKE CAPACITY OF 3 DESERT SPECIES INRESPONSE TO ATMOSPHERIC CO2 ENRICHMENT

Citation
H. Bassirirad et al., GROWTH AND ROOT NO3- AND PO43- UPTAKE CAPACITY OF 3 DESERT SPECIES INRESPONSE TO ATMOSPHERIC CO2 ENRICHMENT, Australian journal of plant physiology, 24(3), 1997, pp. 353-358
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
03107841
Volume
24
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
353 - 358
Database
ISI
SICI code
0310-7841(1997)24:3<353:GARNAP>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
In a phytotron experiment, we examined growth and rates of NO3- and PO 43- uptake in seedlings of two desert C-3 shrubs (Larrea tridentata an d Prosopis glandulosa) and a desert C-4 perennial grass (Bouteloua eri opoda) grown under CO2 partial pressures of 35 or 70 Pa. Plants were g rown in soil but uptake studies were conducted on roots of intact seed lings placed in nutrient solutions containing both NO3- and PO43-. Ele vated CO2 increased total biomass by 69 and 55% in Larrea and Prosopis seedlings and by 25% in Bouteloua. NO3- and PO43- uptake rates were m ore than doubled in Bouteloua at high compared to ambient CO2. In cont rast, CO2 enrichment inhibited root NO3- uptake capacity in Larrea by about 55% without a significant effect on PO43- absorption rate; rates of NO3- and PO43- and uptake in Prosopis were insensitive to CO2 trea tment. Elevated CO2 enhanced the proportion of biomass allocated to th e fine roots in Bouteloua but markedly reduced this fraction in Larrea and Prosopis. Foliar N concentration of both shrubs decreased in resp onse to elevated CO2, but was unaffected in Bouteloua. We suggest that compensatory changes in root size and activity are critical in determ ining interspecies variation in plant nutrient relations under high CO 2.