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Responses to iron limitation in Hordeum vulgare L. as affected by the atmospheric CO2 concentration.
J Environ Qual. 2008 May-Jun; 37(3):1254-62.JE

Abstract

Elevated atmospheric CO2 treatments stimulated biomass production in Fe-sufficient and Fe-deficient barley plants, both in hydroponics and in soil culture. Root/shoot biomass ratio was increased in severely Fe-deficient plants grown in hydroponics but not under moderate Fe limitation in soil culture. Significantly increased biomass production in high CO2 treatments, even under severe Fe deficiency in hydroponic culture, indicates an improved internal Fe utilization. Iron deficiency-induced secretion of PS in 0.5 to 2.5 cm sub-apical root zones was increased by 74% in response to elevated CO2 treatments of barley plants in hydroponics but no PS were detectable in root exudates collected from soil-grown plants. This may be attributed to suppression of PS release by internal Fe concentrations above the critical level for Fe deficiency, determined at final harvest for soil-grown barley plants, even without additional Fe supply. However, extremely low concentrations of easily plant-available Fe in the investigated soil and low Fe seed reserves suggest a contribution of PS-mediated Fe mobilization from sparingly soluble Fe sources to Fe acquisition of the soil-grown barley plants during the preceding culture period. Higher Fe contents in shoots (+52%) of plants grown in soil culture without Fe supply under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations may indicate an increased efficiency for Fe acquisition. No significant influence on diversity and function of rhizosphere-bacterial communities was detectable in the outer rhizosphere soil (0-3 mm distance from the root surface) by DGGE of 16S rRNA gene fragments and analysis of marker enzyme activities for C-, N-, and P-cycles.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Inst. of Soil Science, Univ. of Hohenheim, 70599 Stuttgart, Germany.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18453445

Citation

Haase, S, et al. "Responses to Iron Limitation in Hordeum Vulgare L. as Affected By the Atmospheric CO2 Concentration." Journal of Environmental Quality, vol. 37, no. 3, 2008, pp. 1254-62.
Haase S, Rothe A, Kania A, et al. Responses to iron limitation in Hordeum vulgare L. as affected by the atmospheric CO2 concentration. J Environ Qual. 2008;37(3):1254-62.
Haase, S., Rothe, A., Kania, A., Wasaki, J., Römheld, V., Engels, C., Kandeler, E., & Neumann, G. (2008). Responses to iron limitation in Hordeum vulgare L. as affected by the atmospheric CO2 concentration. Journal of Environmental Quality, 37(3), 1254-62. https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2006.0136
Haase S, et al. Responses to Iron Limitation in Hordeum Vulgare L. as Affected By the Atmospheric CO2 Concentration. J Environ Qual. 2008 May-Jun;37(3):1254-62. PubMed PMID: 18453445.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Responses to iron limitation in Hordeum vulgare L. as affected by the atmospheric CO2 concentration. AU - Haase,S, AU - Rothe,A, AU - Kania,A, AU - Wasaki,J, AU - Römheld,V, AU - Engels,C, AU - Kandeler,E, AU - Neumann,G, Y1 - 2008/05/02/ PY - 2008/5/6/pubmed PY - 2008/9/19/medline PY - 2008/5/6/entrez SP - 1254 EP - 62 JF - Journal of environmental quality JO - J Environ Qual VL - 37 IS - 3 N2 - Elevated atmospheric CO2 treatments stimulated biomass production in Fe-sufficient and Fe-deficient barley plants, both in hydroponics and in soil culture. Root/shoot biomass ratio was increased in severely Fe-deficient plants grown in hydroponics but not under moderate Fe limitation in soil culture. Significantly increased biomass production in high CO2 treatments, even under severe Fe deficiency in hydroponic culture, indicates an improved internal Fe utilization. Iron deficiency-induced secretion of PS in 0.5 to 2.5 cm sub-apical root zones was increased by 74% in response to elevated CO2 treatments of barley plants in hydroponics but no PS were detectable in root exudates collected from soil-grown plants. This may be attributed to suppression of PS release by internal Fe concentrations above the critical level for Fe deficiency, determined at final harvest for soil-grown barley plants, even without additional Fe supply. However, extremely low concentrations of easily plant-available Fe in the investigated soil and low Fe seed reserves suggest a contribution of PS-mediated Fe mobilization from sparingly soluble Fe sources to Fe acquisition of the soil-grown barley plants during the preceding culture period. Higher Fe contents in shoots (+52%) of plants grown in soil culture without Fe supply under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations may indicate an increased efficiency for Fe acquisition. No significant influence on diversity and function of rhizosphere-bacterial communities was detectable in the outer rhizosphere soil (0-3 mm distance from the root surface) by DGGE of 16S rRNA gene fragments and analysis of marker enzyme activities for C-, N-, and P-cycles. SN - 0047-2425 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18453445/Responses_to_iron_limitation_in_Hordeum_vulgare_L__as_affected_by_the_atmospheric_CO2_concentration_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -