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2017 Fiscal Year Final Research Report

Carbon / nitrogen interactions between legumes and parasitic plants

Research Project

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Project/Area Number 26870087
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B)

Allocation TypeMulti-year Fund
Research Field Plant nutrition/Soil science
Plant protection science
Research InstitutionUniversity of Tsukuba

Principal Investigator

IRVING Louis  筑波大学, 生命環境系, 助教 (60597178)

Project Period (FY) 2014-04-01 – 2018-03-31
Keywordshemiparasite / Phtheirospermum / carbon / N status / conditional parasitism
Outline of Final Research Achievements

Our understanding of hemiparasitic plants is that they steal nutrients, hormones and water, but little carbon. In the last year, we have made three major discoveries about the parasite Phtheirospermum japonicum and its host, Medicago sativa. P. japonicum is a carbon-feeding hemiparasite. It does not steal nutrients from the host, but supplements its growth with host-derived photoassimilate. Parasitic intensity in the Phtheirospermum / Medicago system is mediated by host nutrient status. Where the host is supplied nitrogen, it is able to resist the parasite, and suffers no damage. The parasite receives no benefit of attachment to the host. Under nutrient-deprived conditions, host growth is decreased by 75%, and the parasite increased by 33%. Parasite will not grow without N, thus, we must separate out host and parasite nutrient supply. Previous experiments have shown increased host photosynthesis caused by parasite attachment to clover, but only under nutrient deprived conditions.

Free Research Field

Plant Science

URL: 

Published: 2019-03-29  

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