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Increase in nitrate uptake by soybean plants during interruption of the dark period with low intensity light
Author(s) -
Raper C. David,
Vessey J. Kevin,
Henry Leslie T.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1991.tb02127.x
Subject(s) - photoperiodism , zoology , period (music) , darkness , nitrate , horticulture , biology , botany , ecology , physics , acoustics
Diurnal patterns of net NO − 3 uptake by nonnodulated soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Ransom] plants growing in flowing hydroponic culture at 26 and 16°C root temperatures were measured at hourly intervals during alternate days of a 12‐day growth period. Ion chromatography was used to determine removal of NO − 3 from the culture solution. Day and night periods of 9 and 15 h were used during growth. The night period included two 6‐h dark periods and an intervening 3‐h period of night interruption by incandescent lamps to effect a long‐day photoperiod and repress floral initiation. At both root temperatures, the average specific rates of NO − 3 uptake were twice as great during the night interruption period as during the day period; they were greater during the day period than during the dark periods; and they were greater during the dark period immediately following the day period than during the later dark period that followed the night interruption. While these average patterns were repetitious among days, measured rates of uptake varied hourly and included intervals of net efflux scattered through the day period and more frequently through the 2 dark periods. Root temperature did not affect the average daily specific rates of uptake or the qualitative relationships among day, dark and night interruption periods of the diurnal cycle.