Abstract

High abundance of legumes in drylands suggests that symbiotic nitrogen fixation provides an advantage in water-limited environments. However, the interactive effect of nitrogen availability and water scarcity on the nitrogen fixation strategies of dryland legumes remain largely unexplained.We conducted two experiments to test the effects of nitrogen availability and drought on symbiotic nitrogen fixation in two drought-adapted Acacia tree species. Seedlings were grown under deficient and sufficient levels of nitrogen and with and without an imposed drought to test the effect of resource availability on biological nitrogen fixation and plant growth.We found that seedlings that grew in extreme deficiency of nitrogen reached a similar biomass as seedling that grew with a sufficient supply of nitrogen, showing a high nitrogen-use efficiency. Nitrogen fixation was strongly downregulated (reduction of 90% in biomass allocation to nodules) when plants received sufficient nitrogen supply. Under nitrogen deficiency, drought had a slight negative effect on nodule biomass and total biomass. Under sufficient nitrogen, drought reduced nitrogen availability enough to induce an increase in symbiotic nitrogen fixation in the risk-averse A. raddiana but not in the risk-taking A. tortilis.We conclude that strong regulation of nitrogen fixation together with low nitrogen demand, and flexible strategies of carbon and nitrogen allocation, increase the chance of legume tree survival and establishment in dry and unpredictable environments.

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