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The fate of carbon in dying tillers of winter wheat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

Gillian N. Thorne
Affiliation:
Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, AL5 2JQ
D. W. Wood
Affiliation:
Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, AL5 2JQ

Summary

Changes in dry weight and 14C contents of categories of shoots that did and did not survive to produce ears were examined in winter wheat grown in micro-plots in 1982–4. The weight of a group of tillers when dead was similar to their maximum dry weight when living. By anthesis dead shoots exceeded living ones in number but contributed less than 10% of total shoot dry weight.

14CO2 was supplied, near the time that number of shoots was maximal, to tillers in axils of first (T1) and third (T3) main stem leaves; T1 usually survived and T3 usually died. The percentage of 14C in the plant retained in T1 was 78–94%. That retained in T3 ranged from 9 to 81%. Little 14C moved from dying shoots into the rest of the plant in two experiments. In another, perhaps 70% of the 14C in living tillers was transferred as they died but this represented only a small proportion of total plant weight. 14C not retained in tillers to which it had been given was found in all parts of the plant, including about 7% in grain.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

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