Abstract

Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp cv C-152) plants were grown in a system in which watering was withheld from the soil zone containing nodules, while the plants were able to maintain normal water status. The system was developed in a pot by making two soil zones, an upper and a lower separated by a gravel column between these two zones. Plants extended their roots into the lower layer of soil and were able to absorb water. The dry matter accumulation, photosynthesis rate, and leaf area development of the plant were not affected when the upper soil zone was dried, but the water potential of the nodules was lower than in the nodules in fully irrigated pots. Nitrogenase activity in the nodules obtained from plants stressed in the upper zone only was lower than in nodules obtained from fully irrigated plants. The present technique is helpful in distinguishing the direct water stress effects on nitrogen fixation compared to those mediated via photosynthate availability.

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