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- Title
Inorganic nitrogen assimilation in plants of Australian rainforest communities.
- Authors
Stewart, G. R.; Hegarty, E. E.; Specht, R. L.
- Abstract
In a study of the plant communities of two Australian rainforests, it was found that pioner species had high levels of nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) and were predominantly leaf nitrate assimilators. Under‐ and over‐storey species had low levels of shoot and root nitrate reductase activity, and many of them showed little capacity for nitrate reduction even when nitrate ions were freely available. Although closed‐forest species have lower levels of nitrate reductase than those of gaps and forest margins, their total nitrogen contents were similar, suggesting the former utilize nitrogen sources other than nitrate ions. Glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) was present in the leaves of all species examined. In the leaves of pioneer species the chloroplastic isoform of glutamine synthetase predominted, while in most of the species typical of closed‐forest the cytosolic isoform accounted for at least 40% of total leaf activity. Low levels of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase were correlated with a low capacity for leaf nitrate reduction, and both are characteristic of many species that regenerate and grow for some time in shade. Low levels of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase imply that, in some of these woody plants, photorespiratory ammonia is re‐assimilated via cytosolic glutamine synthetase.
- Subjects
PLANT communities; RAIN forests; NITRATES; GLUTAMINE synthetase; PLANT species; PLANT physiology
- Publication
Physiologia Plantarum, 1988, Vol 74, Issue 1, p26
- ISSN
0031-9317
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1399-3054.1988.tb04936.x