Low seed phosphorus concentration depresses early growth and nodulation of narrow‐leafed lupin(Lupinus angustifoliuscv. Gungurru)
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Plant Nutrition
- Vol. 14 (12) , 1355-1367
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01904169109364291
Abstract
Narrow‐leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L) seed with phosphorus (P) concentrations of 0.21, 0.26 or 0.43% were graded to uniform size (128 ± 5 mg) and grown in two glasshouse experiments to examine the effects of seed P concentration on early shoot, root and nodule growth, and its response to external P supply. Four days after imbibing seeds for a solution culture experiment, whole plant fresh weight (FW) of plants grown from low P seed (0.21%) was depressed compared to that from medium (0.26%) or high (0.43%) P seed. This depression in whole plant FW from growing low P seed persisted to final harvest at day 32 for levels of solution P supply ranging from nil to luxury levels. However, at adequate and luxury levels of solution P relative growth rates of plants grown from low P seed recovered from day 6 onwards to equal those of plants grown from medium and high P seed. In deficient‐P treatments, low P in seed strongly depressed root length, especially that of lateral roots which it did largely by decreasing their number. Low P in seed depressed nodule number and mass at all levels of external P supply but to a greater extent where P supply was deficient for growth. In these deficient‐P treatments, N concentrations in shoots were decreased slightly in plants from low P seed. Seed P may be specifically involved in the early stages of nodule development in lupins. In a P‐deficient loam and a P‐adequate sand, low P in seed depressed early shoot and root growth and nodule formation as it did in solutions. We conclude that tow P concentration in lupin seed may limit successful crop establishment of lupins in the field, especially when P is deficient for plant growth or seedlings are subject to early stresses.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- High phosphorus concentration in Trifolium balansae and Medicago polymorpha seed increases in herbage and seed yields in the fieldAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1989
- Increasing phosphorus concentration in lupin seed increases grain yield on phosphorus deficient soilAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1989
- High phosphorus concentrations in seed of wheat and annual medic are related to higher rates of dry matter production of seedlings and plantsAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1988
- Investigation of the Role of Phosphorus in Symbiotic Dinitrogen FixationPlant Physiology, 1987
- Relative addition rate and external concentration; Driving variables used in plant nutrition researchPlant, Cell & Environment, 1982
- RESPONSE OF PLANTS TO PHOSPHATE CONCENTRATION IN SOLUTION CULTURESoil Science, 1967
- Phosphate sorption by soils as a measure of the phosphate requirement for pasture growthAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1967
- The growth of watercress (Rorippa nasturtium aquaticum (L) Hayek) from seed as affected by the phosphorus nutrition of the parent plantPlant and Soil, 1966
- Determination of nitrogen in agricultural materials by the nessler reagent. II.—Micro‐determinations in Plant Tissue and in Soil ExtractsJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1954
- AN EXAMINATION OF THE DEGTJAREFF METHOD FOR DETERMINING SOIL ORGANIC MATTER, AND A PROPOSED MODIFICATION OF THE CHROMIC ACID TITRATION METHODSoil Science, 1934