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Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Nitrogenase Activity and Associated Carbon Budgets in Seedlings of Acacia mangium Measured With a Flow-Through System of the Acetylene Reduction Assay

JS Sun, RJ Simpson and R Sands

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 19(2) 97 - 107
Published: 1992

Abstract

Following introduction of acetylene into the flow-through gas system, nitrogenase activity of young seedlings of Acacia mangiurn Willd. increased during the initial gas mixing period but declined thereafter. Nitrogenase-linked respiration also declined rapidly for 3-4 min and slowly thereafter following introduction of acetylene. Seedlings of 12-42 weeks showed a decline in nitrogenase-linked respiration of 15-40%. Nitrogenase activity and nodulated root respiration declined further when the oxygen concentration in the gas flowing past the nodules was reduced. These concomitant declines in nodulated root respiration and nitrogenase activity were used to explore the relation between nodulated root respiration and nitrogenase activity, and to provide an estimate of the carbon cost of nitrogenase activity, and the growth and maintenance respiration of nodulated roots. The carbon cost of nitrogenase activity was 2-8 μmol CO2 μmol-1 C2H2 reduced for young seedlings (12-20 weeks) and was lower (1.3) for older seedlings (30-42 weeks). Nitrogenase activity was 1.2 μmol C2H4 g-1 nod. dw min-1 for plants at 12 weeks, but was 0.3 μmol C2H4 g-1 nod. dw min-1 for plants at 42 weeks after transplanting. The proportion of nitrogenase-linked respiration in nodulated root respiration also declined rapidly with plant age, being 70% at 12 weeks and only 6% at 42 weeks after transplanting.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9920097

© CSIRO 1992

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