Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10846452 Soil Biology and Biochemistry 2005 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
The direct uptake of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) by plants has the potential to be a primary Factor in ecosystem functioning and vegetation succession particularly in N-limiting environments. Clear experimental evidence to support this view, however, is still lacking. Further, many of the experimental approaches used to assess whether DON is important may be compromised due to the use of inappropriate methods for comparing and quantifying plant available inorganic and organic soil N pools. In addition, experiments aimed at quantifying plant DON capture using dual-labelled (15N, 13C) organic N tracers often do not consider important aspects such as isotope pool dilution, differences in organic and inorganic N pool turnover times, bi-directional DON flows at the soil-root interface, and the differential fate of the 15N and 13C in the tracer compounds. Based upon experimental evidence, we hypothesize that DON uptake from the soil may not contribute largely to N acquisition by plants but may instead be primarily involved in the recapture of DON previously lost during root exudation. We conclude that while root uptake of amino acids in intact form has been shown, evidence demonstrating this as a major plant N acquisition pathway is still lacking.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science
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