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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of soil nitrate on the growth, nodulation and nitrogen fixation of chickpeas (Cicer arietinum)

TLDR
It was found that chickpeas were less sensitive to the inhibitory effects of NO3− than soybeans, and there appeared to be a trend suggesting an inhibitory effect of 6 mMNO3− on C2H2 reduction compared to 1.5 and 3.0 mM NO3 −.
Abstract
A controlled environment experiment was used to examine the growth and nodulation response of chickpea to a range of soil nitrate (NO 3 − ) levels (0, 0.75, 1.5, 3.0, 6.0 mM). Dry matter production, nodule mass and number, dinitrogen (N2) fixation via the acetylene (C2H2) reduction method, total nitrogen content and NO 3 − concentration were measured at 56 and 90 days from inoculated and uninoculated plants. It was found that chickpeas were less sensitive to the inhibitory effects of NO 3 − than soybeans. High NO 3 − appeared to inhibit the production of nodules early in growth, however, by the second harvest nodulation was stimulated by high NO 3 − levels. Increasing NO 3 − levels gave positive responses in tops and roots dry weight production but, proportionally, these effects were greatest with uninoculated plants. 3 and 6 mM NO 3 − gave similar root and tops dry weight in inoculated plants after 90 days. Nodule dry weight production per pot was maximised at 3.0 mM NO 3 − at both plant harvests. Whilst NO 3 − at 6 mM still gave a strong stimulation of acetylene reduction compared to 0 and 0.75 mM NO 3 − , there appeared to be a trend suggesting an inhibitory effect of 6 mM NO 3 − on C2H2 reduction compared to 1.5 and 3.0 mM NO 3 − .

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Citations
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Effects of isoxaflutole on the growth and nodulation of chickpea (Cicer arietinum) under different soil nitrogen rates

TL;DR: Isoxaflutole decreased shoot and root dry weight, nodule number, and nodule dry weight of the sensitive cultivar, and declined with increasing nitrate levels without herbicide application, and addition of herbicide caused a further reduction.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Acetylene-Ethylene Assay for N2 Fixation: Laboratory and Field Evaluation

TL;DR: This assay was successfully applied to measurements of N(2) fixation by other symbionts and by free living soil microorganisms, and was also used to assess the effects of light and temperature on the N( 2) fixing activity of soybeans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reduction of acetylene and nitrogen by field-grown soybeans

TL;DR: In this paper, a diurnal cycle of acetylene reduction was observed in soybean nodules, and the observed ratio of N 2 reduced was approximately 2.0 rather than the often assumed theoretical value of 3.0.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relative abundance of ureides and nitrate in plant tissues of soybean as a quantitative assay of nitrogen fixation.

David F. Herridge
- 01 Jul 1982 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that the shoot axis provides the most suitable target organ when using this technique as a quantitative assay for N(2) fixation because of ease of sampling of these tissues, especially with field-grown plants.
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