4.6 Article

Dinitrogen fixation associated with shoots of aquatic carnivorous plants: is it ecologically important?

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 114, Issue 1, Pages 125-133

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcu067

Keywords

Aldrovanda vesiculosa; aquatic carnivorous plants; Utricularia vulgaris; U; australis; U; intermedia; U; reflexa; daily nitrogen gain; N nutrition; N-15(2) labelling; nitrogen fixation; periphyton; traps

Categories

Funding

  1. Czech Scientific Foundation [P504/11/0783]
  2. programme 'Projects of Large Infrastructure for Research, Development, and Innovations' [LM2010005]
  3. [RVO 67985939]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Rootless carnivorous plants of the genus Utricularia are important components of many standing waters worldwide, as well as suitable model organisms for studying plant-microbe interactions. In this study, an investigation was made of the importance of microbial dinitrogen (N-2) fixation in the N acquisition of four aquatic Utricularia species and another aquatic carnivorous plant, Aldrovanda vesiculosa. 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing was used to assess the presence of micro-organisms with known ability to fix N-2. Next-generation sequencing provided information on the expression of N-2 fixation-associated genes. N-2 fixation rates were measured following N-15(2)-labelling and were used to calculate the plant assimilation rate of microbially fixed N-2. Utricularia traps were confirmed as primary sites of N-2 fixation, with up to 16 % of the plant-associated microbial community consisting of bacteria capable of fixing N-2. Of these, rhizobia were the most abundant group. Nitrogen fixation rates increased with increasing shoot age, but never exceeded 1 center dot 3 mu mol N g(-1) d. mass d(-1). Plant assimilation rates of fixed N-2 were detectable and significant, but this fraction formed less than 1 % of daily plant N gain. Although trap fluid provides conditions favourable for microbial N-2 fixation, levels of nif gene transcription comprised < 0 center dot 01 % of the total prokaryotic transcripts. It is hypothesized that the reason for limited N-2 fixation in aquatic Utricularia, despite the large potential capacity, is the high concentration of NH4-N (2 center dot 0-4 center dot 3 mg L-1) in the trap fluid. Resulting from fast turnover of organic detritus, it probably inhibits N-2 fixation in most of the microorganisms present. Nitrogen fixation is not expected to contribute significantly to N nutrition of aquatic carnivorous plants under their typical growth conditions; however, on an annual basis the plant-microbe system can supply nitrogen in the order of hundreds of mg m(-2) into the nutrient-limited littoral zone, where it may thus represent an important N source.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available