Experiment Title: “Nitrogen demand, availability, and acquisition strategy control plant responses to elevated CO2” Institutions responsible:

Texas Tech University

Experiment Description: Growth chamber pot experiment investigating the effects of nitrogen acquisition strategy and nitrogen availability on leaf and whole-plant responses to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Glycine max seedlings were grown under one of nine soil nitrogen fertilization treatments (0-630 ppm N), one of two atmospheric CO2 treatments (420, 1000 ppm CO2), and one of two inoculation treatments with symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria (no inoculation, inoculation with Bradyrhizobium japonicum) in a full-factorial design. Leaf physiology and whole-plant traits were measured 7 weeks after experiment initiation.
Variables being tested: Experimental Details (factorial design, replication, lab/field/ controls, vegetation type): Data availability: Study limitations:
At least 30 leaf and whole-plant traits collected. Some notable traits include:

  • Carbon costs to acquire nitrogen (root carbon biomass per unit whole-plant nitrogen biomass)
  • Total leaf area
  • Organ allocation fractions (i.e. leaf mass fraction, stem mass fraction, root mass fraction)
  • Anet (both under common CO2, 420ppm, and under growth CO2 concentration)
  • Stomatal conductance
  • Vcmax25
  • Jmax25
  • Jmax25:Vcmax25
  • Cost to acquire and use nitrogen relative to water (i.e. β, calculated from leaf d13C)
  • Leaf Ci:Ca, calculated through leaf d13C (i.e. χ)
  • Leaf nitrogen per unit leaf area (Narea)
  • Leaf nitrogen per unit leaf biomass (Nmass)
  • Leaf dry biomass per unit leaf area (LMA/Marea)
  • Percent nitrogen fixed from the atmosphere (derived from leaf d15N)
  • Root nodule biomass
  • Root nodule biomass:root biomass
Growth chamber pot experiment. Glycine max grown under 16:8 light:dark photoperiod with 3 hour ramp between full light and dark conditions. Daytime temperatures set to 25degC and nighttime temperatures set to 17degC. Relative humidity was 50% throughout the day and night. Fertilization treatments added as modified Hoagland’s solutions such that nitrogen was the only macronutrient or micronutrient modified across fertilization treatments Data are available on Zenodo: here

A preprint for the paper is also available: here

 

 

Carbon costs to acquire nitrogen do not include carbon allocated belowground through root exudates or lost through root exudation

 

Short-term pot experiment- not equipped to answer questions about any long-term effects of nitrogen availability or acquisition strategy on plant responses to elevated CO2