Humidity and light affect the growth, development and nitrogenase activity of stem nodules of Sesbania rostrata Brem
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 125 (4) , 749-755
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1993.tb03924.x
Abstract
The growth and nitrogenase activity of stem nodules of Sesbania rostrata Brem were strongly influenced by the humidity surrounding the nodule. Nodules developed under high humidity showed the fastest rates of growth and the highest specific nitrogenase activity (determined by acetylene reduction). Development of stem nodules in both the light and dark was similar and showed a similar lowering of growth and activity with decreasing humidity. Stem nodules developed in the dark were pale and unlike the dark green nodules that developed in the light, they did not have chloroplasts in the nodule cortex. Adventitious root development required darkness and relative humidities approaching 100%. In stem nodules that were grown at high humidity and subsequently exposed to lower humidities, there was only a small loss of nitrogenase activity, and high rates of acetylene reduction were maintained for 6 d after treatments were begun. The area of nodule attachment to the stem or root was measured in nodules of many sizes and found to be consistently greater in stem nodules. This may have implications for the comparative water balance of nodules on these two organs.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nodule growth and activity may be regulated by a feedback mechanism involving phloem nitrogen*Plant, Cell & Environment, 1993
- Growth of Sesbania rostrata (Brem) with stem nodules under controlled conditionsPlant, Cell & Environment, 1992
- Evidence supporting a non‐phloem source of water for export of solutes in the xylem of soybean root nodulesPlant, Cell & Environment, 1992
- A Simple Open Flow System Used to Measure Acetylene Reduction Activity of Sesbania rostrata Stem and Root NodulesJournal of Experimental Botany, 1992
- Effect of NPK on growth and nitrogen fixation of Sesbania rostrata as a green manure for lowland rice (Oryza sativa L.)Plant and Soil, 1991
- Vascular transport and soybean nodule function. III: Implications of a continual phloem supply of carbon and waterPlant, Cell & Environment, 1990
- Stem-nodule symbiosis and its unusual propertiesPublished by Springer Nature ,1990
- Water balance of N2-fixing root nodules: Can phloem and xylem transport explain it?Plant, Cell & Environment, 1989
- Observations on the use ofSesbania rostrata as green manure in paddy fieldsWorld Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology, 1985
- Regulation of Root DevelopmentAnnual Review of Plant Physiology, 1984