CSIRO Publishing Home Books & CDs Journals About Us Shopping Cart
Crop & Pasture Science
  Continuing Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
You are here: Journals > Crop & Pasture Science   
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   
Journal Home
General Information
Scope
Editorial Committee
Editorial Contact
Sites of Interest
Print Publication Dates
Online Content
For Authors
For Referees
How to Order

 Most Read
Visit our Most Read page regularly to keep up-to-date with the most downloaded papers in this journal.

 Early Alert
Subscribe to our email Early Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 

Rhizosphere processes do not explain variation in P acquisition from sparingly soluble forms among Lupinus albus accessions

Stuart J. Pearse A , C , Erik J. Veneklaas A , Greg Cawthray A , Mike D. A. Bolland A , B and Hans Lambers A

A School of Plant Biology, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
B Department of Agriculture and Food Western Australia, PO Box 1231, Bunbury, WA 6231, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: spearse@graduate.uwa.edu.au


Abstract

Seven Lupinus albus L. landraces were selected, based on their geographic origin and the soil type and pH at the site of collection of the seeds, and compared with the cv. Kiev mutant. We hypothesised that those landraces collected from red/yellow acidic sands (pH 5–5.7) would be better at acquiring P from FePO4 or AlPO4 than those selected from brown neutral (pH 7) or fine, calcareous, alkaline sands (pH 9), and that those selected from fine calcareous sands would be more effective at acquiring P from Ca5OH(PO4)3. Plants were grown in sand and supplied with 40 mg P/kg as the above sparingly soluble forms, or as soluble KH2PO4; control plants received no P. All genotypes were able to use these P sources. Variation in using poorly soluble P was not due to differences in rhizosphere carboxylate concentration, cluster-root development, or rhizosphere-extract pH. L. albus landraces with a better ability to use P from different sparingly soluble forms could be exploited to develop cultivars that are more P-acquisition efficient on soils that are low in [P] or highly P-sorbing; however, desirable genotypes cannot simply be selected based on soil type of origin.

Keywords: carboxylates, cluster roots, pH, phosphate.

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 59(7) 616–623

Submitted: 25 October 2007    Accepted: 19 March 2008    Published: 3 July 2008

Full text DOI: 10.1071/AR07404

© CSIRO 2008

   
Subscriber Login
Username:
Password:  

 View
Issue Contents
PDF (245 KB) $25
Export Citation
Cited by
 Tools
Print
Email this page
    


 
Top  Email this page
 


Legal & Privacy | Sitemap | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2009