Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae (Jan 2015)

Nitrogen assimilation and nitrate reductase activity in tomato seedlings. II. Effect of increasing calcium doses in the presence of high magnesium concentrations on nitrate reduction and protein content

  • A. Suder-Moraw,
  • J. Buczek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5586/asbp.1977.020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 2
pp. 275 – 283

Abstract

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A 3:30 Ca:Mg ratio in the nutrient solution produces in tomato seedlings symptoms of Ca2+ deficit owing to excessive accumulation of Mg2+ ions and the depressed Ca2+ accumulation. As a result of this a decrease in dry weight increment and protein content is observed together with inhibition of nitrate reductase activity. A doubled Ca2+ dose in the nutrient solution, that is a change in the Ca:Mg ratio to 6:30 abolishes the external symptoms of Ca2+ deficit and reduces Mg2+ accumulation, that of Ca2+ ions remaining unchanged. At the same time an enhanced activity of nitrate reductase appears, reaching values close to those in control plants. Tomato seedlings grown on a 3-fold increased Ca2+ dose (Ca:Mg = 9:30) did not differ at all from the control ones. An in-crease in calcium concentration in the nutrient solution, the high magnesium dose remaining unchanged, causes enhanced K+ accumulation, and this may affect nitrate absorption and reduction. It would seem that Ca2+ deficit in plant tissues induced by excessive Mg2+ accumulation with unsuitable Ca:Mg ratio in the nutrient solution in cause of disorders in NO3 nitrogen assimilation.