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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 36:323-327 (1972)
© 1972 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Zinc Absorption by Wheat Seedlings: I. Inhibition by Macronutrient Ions in Short-Term Experiments and its Relevance to Long-Term Zinc Nutrition1

F. M. Chaudhry and J. F. Loneragan2

ABSTRACT

Short-term Zn2+ absorption by intact wheat seedlings (Triticum aestivum L.) was studied to resolve large discrepancies between Zn2+ absorption in short-term experiments with excised roots and in long-term experiments with whole plants.

Excision, pretreatment, and age of seedlings had no effect on short-term Zn2+ absorption.

Zn2+ absorption responded to changes in temperatures with Q10 values of 6.1, 1.8, and 1.9 for the temperature ranges 2 to 10, 10 to 20, and 20 to 29C, respectively. Addition of macronutrient salts to 250µM Ca(NO3)2 in the absorbing solution decreased Zn2+ absorption by about 80%. Micronutrient salts had a small additional effect on Zn2+ absorption.

Cations rather than anions inhibited Zn2+ absorption. Nitrate salts of alkali and alkaline earth cations strongly depressed Zn2+ absorption. In the presence of 250µM Ca(NO3)2, nitrates of alkali cations at 750µM and of additional Ca2+ at 250 and 375µM depressed Zn2+ absorption from 1µM ZnCl2 in the order NH4+ > Rb+ > K+ > Cs+ > Ca2+ > Na+ > Li+. Nitrates of alkaline earth cations at concentrations of 250µM depressed Zn2+ absorption in the order Mg2+ > Ba2+ ≥ Sr2+ = Ca2+. Replacing NO3- with Cl-, SO42-, or H2PO4-, had no effect on Zn2+ absorption.

The inhibitory effects of alkali and alkaline earth cations appeared to be mutually competitive. Large effects of K+ at low concentrations of Ca2+ decreased and finally disappeared with increasing concentrations of Ca2+.

The rates of Zn2+ absorption by 6-day-old, intact wheat seedlings closely approximated those reported for long-term experiments over a wide range of solution Zn2+ concentrations from 0.05 to 5.0µM when the temperature and the composition of the absorbing solutions were identical. These results suggest that it may be possible to relate short-term studies of Zn2+ absorption to long-term studies of Zn nutrition.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Department of Soil Science & Plant Nutrition, Institute of Agriculture, University of Western Australia, Nedlands 6009. This work was supported by the West Australian Wheat Research Committee and by the grant of a Colombo Plan Studentship to the senior author.

2 Ph.D. Student and Associate Professor in Plant Nutrition respectively. Present address of the senior author Radiation Genetics Institute. Atomic Energy Commission, Lyallpur, West Pakistan.

Received for publication June 18, 1971. Accepted for publication November 11, 1971.







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Copyright © 1972 by the Soil Science Society of America.