Abstract

Nitrogen deficiency limits crop performance under elevated CO2 (eCO2), depending on the ability of plant N uptake. However, the dynamics and redistribution of N2 fixation, and fertilizer and soil N use in legumes under eCO2 have been little studied. Such an investigation is essential to improve the adaptability of legumes to climate change. We took advantage of genotype-specific responses of soybean to increased CO2 to test which N-uptake phenotypes are most strongly related to enhanced yield. Eight soybean cultivars were grown in open-top chambers with either 390 ppm (aCO2) or 550 ppm CO2 (eCO2). The plants were supplied with 100 mg N kg−1 soil as 15N-labeled calcium nitrate, and harvested at the initial seed-filling (R5) and full-mature (R8) stages. Increased yield in response to eCO2 correlated highly (r = 0.95) with an increase in symbiotically fixed N during the R5 to R8 stage. In contrast, eCO2 only led to small increases in the uptake of fertilizer-derived and soil-derived N during R5 to R8, and these increases did not correlate with enhanced yield. Elevated CO2 also decreased the proportion of seed N redistributed from shoot to seeds, and this decrease strongly correlated with increased yield. Moreover, the total N uptake was associated with increases in fixed-N per nodule in response to eCO2, but not with changes in nodule biomass, nodule density, or root length.

Highlights

  • Plant demand for nitrogen (N) likely increases under elevated atmospheric CO2

  • This study demonstrated that elevated atmospheric CO2 (eCO2) enhanced total N uptake in soybean, especially during the late reproductive stages

  • The fixed-N was the dominant source of plant N, but the proportion of fixed-N was greater under eCO2 than under ambient CO2 (aCO2) (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Plant demand for nitrogen (N) likely increases under elevated atmospheric CO2 (eCO2). Nitrogen addition enhances CO2 effects on plant productivity. In ryegrass swards, compared to non-N control, N addition resulted in a greater yield response to eCO2 (Schneider et al, 2004). ECO2 significantly increased N uptake of wheat (Butterly et al, 2016). It appears that sufficient N supply may lead to optimization of photosynthetic processes to favor the productivity under eCO2 (Ainsworth and Long, 2005; Luo et al, 2006; Langley and Megonigal, 2010).

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