Abstract

Twenty genotypes of Triticum and Aegilops wheats including diploid, tetraploid and hexaploid types, were grown under contrasting phosphorus (P) regimes (control and low P) at 15 °C by day and 10 °C at night. Dry-matter production and phosphorus and nitrogen uptake and distribution were measured on mature plants. Phosphorus efficiency (PE) was considered in terms of yield per unit of P in the main shoot and concentration of phosphorus in grain (per cent P). In the low-P set, PE, which ranged from 110 to 715 mg grain mg−1 P, increased as the yield per culm and dry-matter partitioning (harvest index) increased, with hexaploid > tetraploid > diploid. In both the control and low-P plants percentage P in grain decreased in the order diploids > tetraploids > hexaploid wheats. Grain phosphorus was highly negatively correlated with the log of grain yield (r = −0.74; −0.88) and the log of harvest index (r = −0.80 and −0.88) for control and low-P plants, respectively. This suggests that future gains in plant harvest index will cause smaller reductions in grain phosphorus concentrations. But, within either a high or low phosphorus supply, wheats with a given grain harvest index have significantly different grain phosphorus concentrations, and conscious selection for this character is feasible. Low-P plants had similar grain nitrogen concentrations but lower nitrogen harvest indexes than control plants.

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