| Literature DB >> 25711823 |
Guntur Venkata Subbarao1, Tadashi Yoshihashi2, Margaret Worthington3, Kazuhiko Nakahara2, Yasuo Ando2, Kanwar Lal Sahrawat4, Idupulapati Madhusudhana Rao3, Jean-Christophe Lata5, Masahiro Kishii6, Hans-Joachim Braun6.
Abstract
Nitrification, the biological oxidation of ammonium to nitrate, weakens the soil's ability to retain N and facilitates N-losses from production agriculture through nitrate-leaching and denitrification. This process has a profound influence on what form of mineral-N is absorbed, used by plants, and retained in the soil, or lost to the environment, which in turn affects N-cycling, N-use efficiency (NUE) and ecosystem health and services. As reactive-N is often the most limiting in natural ecosystems, plants have acquired a range of mechanisms that suppress soil-nitrifier activity to limit N-losses via N-leaching and denitrification. Plants' ability to produce and release nitrification inhibitors from roots and suppress soil-nitrifier activity is termed 'biological nitrification inhibition' (BNI). With recent developments in methodology for in-situ measurement of nitrification inhibition, it is now possible to characterize BNI function in plants. This review assesses the current status of our understanding of the production and release of biological nitrification inhibitors (BNIs) and their potential in improving NUE in agriculture. A suite of genetic, soil and environmental factors regulate BNI activity in plants. BNI-function can be genetically exploited to improve the BNI-capacity of major food- and feed-crops to develop next-generation production systems with reduced nitrification and N2O emission rates to benefit both agriculture and the environment. The feasibility of such an approach is discussed based on the progresses made.Entities:
Keywords: Biological nitrification inhibition (BNI); Climate change; Global warming; Nitrification inhibitors; Nitrogen use efficiency (NUE); Nitrous oxide emissions
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25711823 DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2015.01.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Sci ISSN: 0168-9452 Impact factor: 4.729