Journal
ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 91, Issue 6, Pages 623-635Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcg069
Keywords
Lactuca sativa L.; glasshouse; N-stress; dynamic response; Nicolet
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A previously developed dynamic lettuce model, designed to predict growth and nitrate content under the normal range of glasshouse environmental conditions, has been extended to cover high nitrogen-stress situations. Under severe shortage of nitrogen, lettuce has been observed to grow at a very slow rate, as well as to have abnormally low water content, low reduced-nitrogen content and negligible nitrate content. The new model mimics these observations by adding to the original model a storage compartment for 'excess' carbon. The resulting model has three compartments: (1) 'vacuole', where the soluble non-structural material is stored, and the nitrate : carbon ratio may vary as needed to maintain a constant osmotic potential; (2) 'structure', a metabolically active compartment with fixed chemical composition; and (3) 'excess-carbon', which serves as a long-term storage of 'waterless' carbohydrates. Simulations with the model illustrate its ability to predict the effect of light, temperature and nitrogen in the nutrient solution on the long-term growth and composition of lettuce. They also illustrate them effects of plant size, and the associated relative growth rate, on the characteristic times of transient responses resulting from step changes in the environment. (C) 2003 Annals of Botany Company.
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