Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2009
1. It has been shown experimentally that the excretion of nitrogen noted by us in cultures of inoculated legumes takes place from the nodule bacteria, probably from the intranodular ones, and not from the roots. No excretion of amino acids occurs in cultures of uninoculated legumes growing on nitrate nitrogen.
2. Our earlier hypothesis that the legumes receive their nitrogen nutrition from the nodules in the form of organic nitrogen compounds, particularly amino acids, is in perfect accord with our new observations concerning the process of excretion. All facts indicate that the amino acids concerned are primary products of the nitrogen fixation, and not breakdown products of proteins. Bond's valuable work along quite different lines produced results which support this conclusion. He, however, did not study the chemical nature of the nitrogen compounds in question.
3. The excretion of nitrogen occurs in media capable of absorbing the excreted nitrogen compounds (cellulose, kaolin, sand, soil). The demonstration of the excretion is not possible in water cultures except when very large quantities of water are used. On the basis of these facts a hypothesis is advanced to explain the nature of the excretion.
4. The term total fixed nitrogen has been used as an expression for the extent of nitrogen fixation, while the term extent of excretion is employed to indicate that percentage of the total fixed nitrogen which is excreted from the nodules.
5. The extent of excretion depends largely on the strain used for inoculation. With strains of apparently equal effectiveness in nitrogen fixation, the extent of excretion may vary considerably, so that actually such strains differ in their effectiveness.