1. Nitrogen Use Efficiency and Nitrogen Fertilizer Recovery of Durum Wheat Genotypes as Affected by Interspecific Competition
- Author
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Paolo Ruisi, Dario Giambalvo, Alfonso Salvatore Frenda, Gaetano Amato, Giuseppe Di Miceli, Giambalvo, D., Ruisi, P., DI MICELI, G., Frenda, A., and Amato, G.
- Subjects
Crop yield ,media_common.quotation_subject ,food and beverages ,Interspecific competition ,Biology ,engineering.material ,Triticum durum, NUE, NUpE, NUtE, interspecific competition ,Competition (biology) ,Settore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee ,Human fertilization ,Agronomy ,engineering ,Poaceae ,Fertilizer ,Weed ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Plant nutrition ,media_common - Abstract
A better understanding of the genotype response to N fertilization under weed competition is necessary to identify varieties that exhibit high N use effi ciency even when weeds compete for available N. Such varieties may be more suitable for low input or organic systems. Th is study assessed the variations in nitrogen use effi ciency (NUE) (and its components) and the recovery of 15 N-labeled fertilizer in three durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) genotypes (one landrace and two varieties that diff er in terms of plant growth, grain yield potential, and adaptability to stressful environments) grown in the presence or absence of interspecifi c competition and varying soil N availability (0 or 80 kg N ha –1 fertilization). Th e results showed that wheat genotypes had diff erent grain yield potentials and the yields were similar when plants were grown in conditions of low N availability and in presence of interspecifi c competition. Diff erences among genotypes in N uptake effi ciency were very small, and the low NUE value observed for the landrace seemed to be due to its reduced ability to use absorbed N for increasing grain yield compared with the two varieties. Furthermore, the genotypes showed diff erent competitive abilities against competitor, and seemed to depend on the genotypes’ ability to reduce resource availability (N) for their competitors rather than on their ability to tolerate a reduction in contested resources due to competitors.
- Published
- 2010
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