Phosphorus responses of C3and C4species
Open Access
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Experimental Botany
- Vol. 47 (4) , 497-505
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/47.4.497
Abstract
An hypothesis was formulated that phosphorus (P) partitioning in tissues of C4 leaves would permit C4 plants to resist P deficiency better than C3 plants. To test this hypothesis, 12 C3, C4, and C3−C4 intermediate species were grown at adequate, deficient, and severely deficient P supply in a solid-phase-buffered sand culture system to characterize photosynthetic and growth responses. Species differed considerably in response to P stress. The growth of C3 species was more sensitive to P supply than C4 species, but C3 and C4 species had similar photosynthetic P use efficiency, and C4 species did not have low leaf P content, contrary to our hypothesis. In fact, leaf photosynthetic rates were not correlated with growth responses. Moncots had lower leaf P content and better maintenance of leaf production under P stress than dicots, because of greater inhibition of branching (dicots) than of tillering (monocots). The most P efficient species in this survey was Brachiaria, a C4 monocot that increased root biomass allocation under stress while maintaining P allocation to the shoot. It is concluded that C4 species are not inherently more P efficient than C3 species, but that monocots are more P efficient than dicots, because of contrasting P and biomass allocation under stress.Keywords
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