AOBPreview published online on August 4, 2004
Annals of Botany, doi:10.1093/aob/mch155
© 2004 by Annals of Botany Company
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Submitted on November 10, 2003
Affiliation of the authors:
1 Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Division of Environmental Engineering, Water and Agriculture, Technion, Haifa 32000, Israel;
2 Provincial Research and Advisory Centre for Agriculture and Horticulture, B-8800 Rumbeke, Belgium;
3 Laboratory of Plant Ecology, Ghent University, B-9000, Ghent, Belgium
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: segineri{at}tx.technion.ac.il.
Background and Aims It is well established that the nitrogen content of plants, including lettuce, decreases with time. It has also been observed that water content of lettuce increases between planting and harvest. This paper is an attempt at modelling these observations. Methods An existing dynamic model (NICOLET), designed to predict growth and nitrate content of glasshouse lettuce, is modified to accommodate the ontogenetic changes of reduced-nitrogen and water contents (on a dry matter basis). The decreasing reduced-N content and the increasing water content are mimicked by dividing the originally uniform plant into metabolically active tissue and support tissue. The metabolic tissue is assumed to contain a higher nitrogen content and a lower water content than the support tissue. As the plants grow, the ratio of support to metabolic tissue increases, resulting in an increased mean water content and a decreased reduced-N content. Simulations with the new model are compared with experimental glasshouse data over four seasons. Key Results The empirical linear relationship between water and reduced-N contents, matches, to a good approximation, the corresponding relationship based on the model. The agreement between the two makes it possible to effectively uncouple the estimation of the ontogenetic parameters from the estimation of the other parameters. The growth and nitrate simulation results match the data rather well and are hardly affected by the new refinement. The reduced-N and water contents are predicted much better with the new model. Conclusion Prediction of nitrogen uptake for the substantial nitrate pool of lettuce depends on the water content. Hence, the modified model may assist in making better fertilization decisions and better estimates of nitrogen leaching.
Revised on March 23, 2004
Accepted on May 18, 2004
Modelling Ontogenetic Changes of Nitrogen and Water Content in Lettuce
IDO SEGINER1*,
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