Frontiers in Plant Science (Jun 2018)

15N Natural Abundance Evidences a Better Use of N Sources by Late Nitrogen Application in Bread Wheat

  • Teresa Fuertes-Mendizábal,
  • José M. Estavillo,
  • Miren K. Duñabeitia,
  • Ximena Huérfano,
  • Ander Castellón,
  • Carmen González-Murua,
  • Ana Aizpurua,
  • María Begoña González-Moro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00853
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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This work explores whether the natural abundance of N isotopes technique could be used to understand the movement of N within the plant during vegetative and grain filling phases in wheat crop (Triticum aestivum L.) under different fertilizer management strategies. We focus on the effect of splitting the same N dose through a third late amendment at flag leaf stage (GS37) under humid Mediterranean conditions, where high spring precipitations can guarantee the incorporation of the lately applied N to the soil-plant system in an efficient way. The results are discussed in the context of agronomic parameters as N content, grain yield and quality, and show that further splitting the same N dose improves the wheat quality and induces a better nitrogen use efficiency. The nitrogen isotopic natural abundance technique shows that N remobilization is a discriminating process that leads to an impoverishment in 15N of senescent leaves and grain itself. This technique also reflects the more efficient use of N resources (fertilizer and native soil-N) when plants receive a late N amendment.

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