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Short term physiological implications of NBPT application on the N metabolism of Pisum sativum and Spinacea oleracea. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of the urease inhibitor NBPT on nitrogen metabolism in pea and spinach plants grown hydroponically with urea as their only nitrogen source.
  • The results indicate that NBPT significantly affects pea plants more than spinach, with noticeable inhibition of urease activity, increased urea levels, and decreased ammonium content, leading to impaired nitrogen assimilation.
  • In spinach, the absorption of NBPT is lower, resulting in minimal effect on urease activity, suggesting species-specific responses to the inhibitor's application.

Article Abstract

The application of urease inhibitors in conjunction with urea fertilizers as a means of reducing N loss due to ammonia volatilization requires an in-depth study of the physiological effects of these inhibitors on plants. The aim of this study was to determine how the urease inhibitor N-(n-butyl) thiophosphoric triamide (NBPT) affects N metabolism in pea and spinach. Plants were cultivated in pure hydroponic culture with urea as the sole N source. After 2 weeks of growth for pea, and 3 weeks for spinach, half of the plants received NBPT in their nutrient solution. Urease activity, urea and ammonium content, free amino acid composition and soluble protein were determined in leaves and roots at days 0, 1, 2, 4, 7 and 9, and the NBPT content in these tissues was determined 48h after inhibitor application. The results suggest that the effects of NBPT on spinach and pea urease activity differ, with pea being most affected by this treatment, and that the NBPT absorbed by the plant caused a clear inhibition of the urease activity in pea leaf and roots. The high urea concentration observed in leaves was associated with the development of necrotic leaf margins, and was further evidence of NBPT inhibition in these plants. A decrease in the ammonium content in roots, where N assimilation mainly takes place, was also observed. Consequently, total amino acid contents were drastically reduced upon NBPT treatment, indicating a strong alteration of the N metabolism. Furthermore, the amino acid profile showed that amidic amino acids were major components of the reduced pool of amino acids. In contrast, NBPT was absorbed to a much lesser degree by spinach plants than pea plants (35% less) and did not produce a clear inhibition of urease activity in this species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jplph.2010.07.024DOI Listing

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