Abstract

The phosphorus (P) uptake rate of several white clover populations was determined in two solution culture experiments. Populations and cultivars differed in P uptake per plant and per unit root length in both experiments. Correlation and multiple regression analysis showed that differences between populations for P uptake per plant were largely related (r2>80%) to differences in leaf area and absolute growth rate, when plants had been grown at high-P levels, and by differences in root size and absolute growth rate when plants had been grown at low-P levels. Differences between populations for P uptake per unit root length were related (r2≈50%) to leaf area and relative growth rate in experiment 1 and to transpiration rate and water influx in experiment 2, when plants were pretreated at high-P levels. Differences between populations for P uptake per unit root length were negatively related to root size when plants had been grown at low-P levels.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call