Abstract
The relation between the source‐sink ratio and nitrogen nutrition on grain yield of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Klein Chamaco) was studied in a greenhouse experiment. Plants were grown until anthesis in pots with soil fertilized with 0.16 mmol N per plant twice a week. At anthesis, all leaves but the flag leaf were excised in a group of plants. In another group the treatment consisted in a similar defoliation plus the longitudinal excision of half the ear, while a third group was left untouched as a control. At the same time, the N supply to half of the plants in each group was interrupted, while the other half continued receiving 16 mM N. The defoliated plants showed a longer functional life of the flag leaf than the control, retaining the chlorophyll, soluble proteins and total reduced nitrogen for a longer time. The ear‐excised plants showed an intermediate behavior. The plants with the interrupted N supply showed a faster leaf senescence than the N supplied ones, and this coincided with an increase in the proteolytic activity and nitrogen transport to the ear. However there were no differences in ear weight between the two nitrogen treatments. It is concluded that leaves and ear compete for the nitrogen, and that a low level of carbohydrates in the flag leaf, due to a low source‐sink ratio, delays leaf senescence.
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