1979
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/30.1.145
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The Respiratory Costs of Nitrogen Fixation in Soyabean, Cowpea, and White Clover

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Cited by 121 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Since nitrate uptake and N 2 fixation are negatively correlated in T. repens (Griffith et al 2000), clover might down-regulate N 2 fixation and compete with other plant species for N when mineral N levels in soil increase (Schwinning and Parsons 1996). This is advantageous, because the metabolic costs of N 2 fixation are greater than those of mineral N uptake (Ryle et al 1979) and because, by taking up mineral N, clover is decreasing N availability for competitors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since nitrate uptake and N 2 fixation are negatively correlated in T. repens (Griffith et al 2000), clover might down-regulate N 2 fixation and compete with other plant species for N when mineral N levels in soil increase (Schwinning and Parsons 1996). This is advantageous, because the metabolic costs of N 2 fixation are greater than those of mineral N uptake (Ryle et al 1979) and because, by taking up mineral N, clover is decreasing N availability for competitors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may be that rhizobium-dependent legume growth was Nlimited during the seedling stage but C-limited in more mature plants (Williams et al, 1981). Part of the limitation to growth associated with nitrogen fixation might be owing to greater light energy requirements of N:-fixation (Hunter et al, 1982;Ryle et al, 1979) and the slower development of active nodules compared to development of nitrate reducing capability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, soil supply of N was abundant (77% contribution to total yield) in Wisconsin during 2011 and additional N was not needed. Previous research has found the process of BNF to be more energetically expensive in comparison to N assimilation (Finke et al, 1982;Minchin et al, 1981;Ryle et al, 1979;Sinclair, 2004). Therefore, soybean grown in conditions with a large supply of N from soil, residual sources, and/or fertilizer will allow more photosynthate to be available for dry matter production and/or protein accumulation rather than expenditure on BNF.…”
Section: Grain Yieldmentioning
confidence: 99%