4.7 Article

Chronic ozone exposure affects nitrogen remobilization in wheat at key growth stages

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 908, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.168288

Keywords

Abiotic stress; Chlorophyll; Senescence; Nitrogen translocation; Nitrogen fertilization; Wheat yields

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The interaction between nitrogen storage and translocation, senescence, and late phase photosynthesis is critical to the post-anthesis grain fill period in wheat. However, the effect of ozone on nitrogen dynamics within the wheat plant is not well understood. This study found that chronic ozone exposure triggered earlier senescence and reduced chlorophyll content in lower leaves. High ozone levels increased residual nitrogen levels and decreased C:N ratios, while extra nitrogen fertilization at anthesis mitigated these effects. Ozone had no effect on nitrogen translocation within the plant.
The interaction between nitrogen storage and translocation, senescence, and late phase photosynthesis is critical to the post-anthesis grain fill period in wheat, but ozone's effect on nitrogen dynamics within the wheat plant is not well understood. This study used solardomes to expose a widely grown elite spring wheat cultivar, cv. Skyfall, to four levels of ozone (30 ppb, 45 ppb, 70 ppb, 85 ppb) for 11 weeks, with two levels of nitrogen fertilization, 140 kg ha(-1) and 160 kg ha(-1), the higher rate including an additional 20 kg N ha(-1) at anthesis. Chronic ozone exposure triggered earlier senescence in the 4th, 3rd and 2nd leaves but not the flag leaf, with a similar pattern of reduced chlorophyll content in the lower, older leaf cohorts, which started before senescence became visible. At anthesis there was no evidence of any effect of ozone on nitrogen storage in upper plant parts. However, high ozone increased levels of residual nitrogen found within plant parts at harvest, with concomitant reductions in C:N ratios and Nitrogen Remobilization Efficiency. Extra nitrogen fertilization applied at anthesis appeared to ameliorate the effect of ozone on nitrogen content and nitrogen translocation. The application of N-15 ammonium nitrate at anthesis confirmed that the majority of post-anthesis nitrogen uptake had been translocated to the ear/grain by harvest, with no effect of ozone on the translocation of nitrogen around the plant. These data can inform future modelling of ozone's effect on nitrogen dynamics and global wheat yields.

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