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Adequate plant nutrition supports biological nitrogen fixation

By Agrositio. 04/03/2022 | 17:03


Nitrogen availability and plant growth are closely related and their conjunction results in the production of all crops, including legumes that incorporate or fix this nutrient from the air. The fixed amount of nitrogen is variable and responds to the joint characteristics of various environmental factors such as temperatures, water balance, and soil components that affect both the host plants (legumes) and the microorganisms in symbiosis (rhizobia).

Under conditions of high productivity, lower growth limitations, the highest nitrogen fixation contributions are achieved in soybean crops (Racca et al., 2001, Collino et al. 2015). This is how, from crop management decisions, this behavior is reflected in the fact that the strategies to improve crop performance are the same as those required to increase its potential for biological nitrogen fixation (Santachiara et al. 2019).

The proliferation of microorganisms, the infection of root hairs and the growth of plants vary according to the concentration of various elements in the soil solution. Nutrient availability is one of the soil components that intervenes integrally in the biological nitrogen fixation process. For this reason, the administration of nutrients, in order to avoid limitations in the growth of legumes, participates directly in nitrogenous nutrition and results in the production of these species. When fertilizing with phosphorus, in places limited in this element, it improves both the formation of nodules and their growth or size, mainly those located on the main root. Adequate sulfur availability also contributes positively to nodule formation (Santachiara et al., 2019). This is shown by the compilation of comparative evaluations of fertilization with phosphorus or sulfur in the Pampas region, where on average between slightly more than 2 to 3 nodules are described on the main root of plants fertilized with these nutrients (Fig.1).

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